Carbon tax a step forward

It is a historic step forward for Australia to be finally taking  action to price carbon. The time for talking is over as the damaging  impacts of global warming become ever more apparent. By acting to  reduce emissions, the politics of delay and denial will become a  historic relic.
However, the long delay in acting makes our challenge today bigger  and more urgent than ever. The aspirations of the carbon pricing  scheme are low in comparison with what the science community tells us  we need to do to avoid great damage to Australia’s economy, our  environment, and the way we live.
This legislation places new responsibilities on all those concerned about the human- induced climate disruption to ensure that the price of carbon steadily  and rapidly rises so as to encourage renewable energy industries and  to discourage an expansion of gas-fired power. This  increasingly seems  to be impossible under an ETS framework, if the Europeanxperience is  any guide.
The proposal is a com-promise between players with different, and  often opposing interests, and is far from being as ambitious and  science-driven as the community climate action movement understands is  necessary.  We are concerned that too much compensation to big  polluters can lock in aspects of the brown economy.  Statements from the Prime Minister that Australia’s coal industry will continue to  expand are frightening and suggest that some in the Labor Government  have chosen not to understand the depth and urgency of the climate change challenge. Real action on climate means winding down coal exports, and ensuring that no new coal mines are opened.
A large gap remains between political will and the scientific  realities, and the scheme’s targets must be lifted over time, together  with an industry plan for skills, jobs and investment to build the clean, renewable energy economy. The national carbon reduction targets  must rise rapidly, so as to respond appropriately and urgently to what the climate science is telling us.
Transparent governance, especially for the independent Climate Change Authority recommending future targets and carbon budgets, allows policy to be recalibrated to the science over time. An  independent commission to regularly review the science, Australia’s  role and international developments in order to make yearly  recom-mendations to government, provides an ongoing process of public, community engage-ment in climate policy.
The new independent statutory body, the Australian Renewable Energy  Agency (ARENA), creating whole-of-government management of $3.2 billion of renewable energy funding at arm’s length from government, is a big step forward. It represents one of several instances where  the role of the independents and the Greens in negotiations has improved the outcome. Its long-term worth can be guaranteed by locking  in and expanding recurrent annual funding for at least the next  decade, to provide certainty for the industry regardless of the  complexion of government in Canberra.
We strongly support action to start closing Australia’s dirtiest coal-fired power stations, but the intention must be matched by a plan to start now. The level of greenhouse gases and future warming is now greater than at any time since modern humans walked  this planet, so thinking we can continue greenhouse gas emissions for many decades to come is a fatal mistake.
The major credit for this limited but very significant step forward must go to the Australian Greens which, with the assistance of the 160 grass-roots Climate Action Groups around the country, forced the Government to embrace the above policies.

Geoff Lazarus
Climate Active Australia

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