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Labor backs fossil fuels as new gas and coal projects get the go ahead

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
12,608
1,751
113
Ghawar
James Supple
Sept 16, 2022

Even after pushing its 43 per cent climate target through parliament, the new Labor government has made it clear that it’s still open season for gas and coal projects.

Anthony Albanese attended the Minerals Council’s annual dinner in early September, reassuring mining company bosses in a speech that Labor would support their criminal plans for new fossil fuel projects across the country.

The message was, “Albanese backs coal and gas export boom”, as the Financial Review put it.

A week earlier, the government approved ten new areas for oil and gas exploration off the coasts of WA, the NT, Victoria, and Ashmore and Cartier islands.

The approval of exploration across almost 47,000 square kilometres “supports ongoing investment in the nation’s petroleum sector”, Resources Minister Madeleine King declared.

The same day she announced the approval of the first two offshore carbon capture and storage projects since 2014, backing an oil and gas company effort to greenwash their ongoing increase in fossil fuel emissions.

In alarm, 100 scientists signed an open letter calling on the government to take climate impacts into account on project approvals, warning, “Any new coal or gas projects will dangerously worsen climate change.”

There is a surge in fossil fuel projects taking place nationwide as mining companies look to cash in on high export prices.

Woodside’s profits soared five-fold to $2.4 billion in the last year, Whitehaven coal made $3 billion while Santos made $1.9 billion in the last six months alone.

This includes opening new gas fields in the Beetaloo in the NT, the Bowen and Galilee Basins in Queensland and the massive Scarborough carbon bomb in the Burrup Hub in WA, with domestic emissions alone equivalent to opening five new coal power stations.

Traditional owners in the Tiwi islands are also challenging Santos’ $5 billion Barossa gas project, which is almost half complete.

Santos has all other approvals for the project finalised and claims that a series of emails it sent to the Tiwi Land Council were enough to tick off requirements for consultation.

Santos has also bought the company building the Hunter Gas Pipeline, in an effort to fast track delivery of gas from its proposed Narrabri Pilliga coal seam gas project.

This fossil fuel expansion threatens to make even Labor’s inadequate 43 per cent reduction target by 2030 impossible. But the International Energy Agency has warned that no more coal or gas projects are possible if warming is going to be kept to 1.5 degrees.

There are at least 114 new fossil fuel projects in the planning stage nationwide.

Albanese says he wants to end the climate wars.

But he is still waging a reckless war on the planet’s future. We need to build a fight to stop his efforts to pump out more fossil fuels.

 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
12,608
1,751
113
Ghawar
Anthony Albanese can easily beat the likes of Trudeau, Steven Guilbeault
and John Kerry among climate leaders as the contender for world's top
climate hypocrite.

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‘Contradiction’: Anthony Albanese may skip UN climate summit

Katie McLeod
Sept 15, 2022

Anthony Albanese is unlikely to attend the United Nations climate change summit in Egypt later this year.

Energy and Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen and the assistant minister in the portfolio, Jenny McAllister, are both set to attend the COP27 at Sharm El-Sheikh in two months’ time.

It is understood the Prime Minister could decline an invite to the event.

The Egyptian President has invited heads of state and government to speak at COP27 from November 7 to November 8, at the same time as Australia’s parliament is sitting.

COP27 is also on right before the G20 summit in Bali and then the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in Thailand.

Mr Albanese criticised Scott Morrison for his indecision over whether to attend the COP26 in Glasgow last November, saying at the time it would be “tragic” if Australia wasn’t represented.

Mr Albanese has this year been bidding for Australia to co-host the COP29 with other Pacific nations in 2024.

Two former Pacific Island leaders this week visited Canberra, where they said they would not support Australia hosting the summit as long as it continued to export fossil fuels.

Former Kiribati president Anote Tong and former Palau president Thomas Esang “Tommy” Remengesau said Australia needed to step up its commitment to climate action in order to hold such an event.

“If Australia will host a COP but at the same time continues to export coal and gas, then obviously these are a contradiction. We have delivered this message to the government,” Mr Tong told reporters at Parliament House on Wednesday.

Mr Tong reiterated his position on Thursday.

“And it … would seem to be a contradiction, if Australia wanted to host the forum, the COP, (and) wanted the Pacific Island countries to be a part of that, and at the same time, is contributing in significant terms to the emission levels,” he told ABC Radio.

The former prime minister came under significant public pressure to take part in COP26 and eventually agreed to attend the event.

Mr Morrison flew to Glasgow straight from the G20 summit in Rome.

Countries at COP26 were expected to present their revised Nationally Determined Contributions; their plans to show how they will cut greenhouse gas emissions to meet their targets under the Paris Agreement.

After months of wavering and a public clash between the Liberals and Nationals over Australia’s targets, Mr Morrison at COP26 formally committed Australia to net-zero emissions by 2050.

Mr Morrison wouldn’t lift his government’s 2030 target any higher than its already agreed upon 26 to 28 reduction in emissions on 2005 levels.

Labor went to this year’s federal election promising stronger action on climate change.

The Albanese government last week passed its signature climate legislation through the Senate with the support of The Greens.

It enshrines in law both Australia’s net-zero by 2050 commitment and a short-term target of reducing emissions by 43 per cent on 2005 levels by 2030.

Australia has this week been urged to increase its investment in climate action to uphold a commitment it made at the 2009 climate summit in Copenhagen.

Australia at the time agreed to contribute to a $100bn USD fund which would support developing countries dealing with climate change.

But a report released by ActionAid Australia on Thursday estimates Australia is funding only one-tenth of its share globally.

The report calls on the federal government to immediately increase its climate finance commitments to $3bn before COP27.

ActionAid also wants the Commonwealth government to commit $4bn in climate finance each year from 2025.

 
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