Australia sets sights on clean energy jobs created by 'climate
emergency'
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[July 27, 2022]
By Kirsty Needham
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia sees the
world's climate emergency as an opportunity to create jobs, the new
Labor government said on Wednesday, introducing legislation to enshrine
an emissions reduction target.
Minister for Climate and Energy Chris Bowen said a decade of political
in-fighting had seen Australia go backwards on climate change, and the
legislation would send a message that Australia was "open for business"
and "back as a good international citizen".
"The world's climate emergency is Australia's jobs opportunity," he
said, adding the resource-rich nation could become a renewable energy
powerhouse.
Iron ore sent to China, coal and liquefied natural gas are Australia's
top exports.
Bowen said clean energy jobs would be created in battery manufacturing,
and commodities such as aluminium, lithium, copper, cobalt and nickel.
"There is a significant export market waiting for us if we get the
levers right," he said.
Legislation setting a 43% emissions reduction target by 2030 and
net-zero by 2050 was a beginning, and its implementation would be
monitored by an independent climate change authority.
"We see 43% as a floor on what our country can achieve," he said, a
stance backed on Wednesday by business groups.
The conservative Liberal and Nations coalition, swept out of office in a
May election where Greens and independents pushing for climate change
action won record seats amid a backdrop of worsening fires and floods,
is opposing the bill.
The government is negotiating with the Greens, which hold the balance of
power in the upper house and want more ambitious climate action.
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A solar array, a linked collection of solar panels, can be seen in
front of a residential apartment block in the Sydney suburb of
Chatswood in Australia, July 28, 2017. REUTERS/David Gray
The president of the UN's Climate Change Conference, Alok Sharma,
said the Australian government "had a fresh mandate from their
voters to tackle climate change" and he was struck by protesters in
Australia who held placards saying "2050 is too late" as he visited
this week.
"Our populations know that the world is running out of time, and we
also know if we act now we will reap an economic as well as
environmental dividend - jobs, growth and a boost for all of our
economies," he said in a speech in Fiji on Wednesday.
He added that unless governments act now, the goal of containing
warming to 1.5 degrees would "slip irreversibly out of reach".
The government has said it cannot support a Greens call to stop new
coal and gas projects.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said in a TV interview on Tuesday it
also wouldn't end coal exports, because Australia's customers would
substitute it from other sources.
"What you would see is a lot of jobs lost, you would see a
significant loss to our economy, significant less taxation revenue
for education, health and other services, and that coal wouldn't
lead to a reduction in global emissions," he told the ABC.
(This story corrects to change day in first and 8th paragraphs)
(Reporting by Kirsty Needham; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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