This was published 3 years ago
Net zero by 2050 plan ‘uniquely Australian’: Morrison
By Rachel Clun
Prime Minister Scott Morrison has launched the federal government’s plan to achieve net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 by lauding the country’s achievements so far, saying Australia is on track to achieve a cut of up to 35 per cent by 2030.
“Australia has already met and beaten our ... 2020 targets and indeed Australia will beat and meet our 2030 targets as well,” Mr Morrison said on Tuesday.
The government’s policy is a cut of 26 to 28 per cent on 2005 levels by 2030.
“We believe we will be able to achieve a 35 per cent reduction in emissions by 2030: that is something we actually think we are going to achieve,” he said.
The government’s plan to achieve net zero by 2050 stresses industries, regions and jobs will not be put at risk. The target of net zero by 2050 will not be legislated.
Mr Morrison was accompanied by Minister for Industry, Energy and Emissions Reduction Angus Taylor, but Deputy Prime Minister and Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce was not present. Nationals MPs backed the goal in a tense meeting on Sunday that cleared the way for Tuesday’s launch of the plan to tackle climate change, which includes $19 billion in investments for low emissions technologies including solar and clean hydrogen by 2030.
Mr Morrison said it was “uniquely Australian”.
“Australians want action on climate change. They’re taking action on climate change but they also want to protect their jobs and their livelihoods. They also want to keep the costs of living down,” he said. “And I also want to protect the Australian way of life, especially in rural and regional areas. The Australian way of life is unique.”
Mr Morrison will fly to Rome on Thursday to attend the G20 summit before spending two days in Glasgow for the United Nations climate talks.
The Prime Minister said the plan to cut emissions was not a plan “at any cost”. “There’s no blank cheques here,” he said.
He promised the target would not spell the end of coal or gas production or exports and would not increase energy bills.
“It will not impact households businesses or the broader economy with new costs or taxes imposed by the initiatives that we are undertaking,” he said. “It will not cost jobs, not in farming, mining or gas. Because what we’re doing in these plans is positive things, enabling things.
It also would not be a “set and forget” program, with five-yearly reviews from the Productivity Commission. The first review is set for 2023 and will look at the socio-economic impact of the plan.
Mr Taylor said the plan to achieve net zero by the middle of the century was achievable, thanks in part to the country’s performance to date on reducing emissions.
“Australia versus even developed countries has performed extremely well, with a reduction of almost 21 per cent since 2005,” he said.
Mr Taylor said carbon offset would be an important part of the plan, noting that Australia had 90 million hectares of productive agricultural land. Another focus would be reducing the costs of low emissions technologies.
“We’re looking at the customer and technology trends, shaping those trends to our advantage; and on the back of that, ensuring we have a portfolio of technologies that can deliver the outcome we want to deliver which is head zero by 2050,” he said.
‘Actions speak louder than words’
Mr Morrison predicted Australia’s plan to cut emissions would be strongly welcomed at the UN climate summit. He had been under increasing international pressure to increase the nation’s climate targets ahead of the conference, which starts on November 1.
“The actions of Australia, speak louder than the words of others. There’ll be lots of words in Glasgow, but I’ll be able to point to the actions of Australia and the achievements of Australia, and I think that’s very important,” he said.
The plan has already been welcomed by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who overnight hailed the pledge to cut emissions as “heroic”.
Mr Morrison said the modelling that backed the plan would be released in due course.
When asked what the entire cost was, excluding funding previously announced, he said the plan drew together many earlier budget announcements including $464 million for green hydrogen and $1.4 billion in the Building Better Regions Fund.
“The budget is about achieving this plan and particularly on this plan there is $20 billion – pretty much all of which gets spent in rural and regional areas to achieve the lower emissions energy targets.”
‘A vibe rather than a road map’
Labor derided the government’s plan, saying it was more of a feeling than a detailed road map.
“The Prime Minister announced a vibe today, rather than a target,” Opposition leader Anthony Albanese said. “You weren’t given any detail at all today and of course we haven’t been given any either. [In] their own words, there is nothing new in this plan. To quote their document, the plan is based on our existing policies.”
Mr Albanese said if the plan was really supported by the entire Coalition, Mr Joyce would have been standing beside the Prime Minister as it was launched.
“The fact is that the only reason why there is not going to [be] legislation about net zero by 2050, isn’t that there’s a risk that it won’t be carried, because Labor would vote for net zero by 2050, it is because the Coalition would be embarrassed by the number of their own members who would cross the floor,” he said.
Labor is yet to reveal its own plan to reach the net zero emissions target by 2050. Mr Albanese said the party was waiting to see what happened at the Glasgow summit before finalising its position.
“We’ll finalise a number of matters after Glasgow and it’ll be well known well before the election,” he said.
Fascinating answers to perplexing questions delivered to your inbox every week. Sign up to get our new Explainer newsletter here.