Australia government must reconsider climate approach

abbott climateIt may have been desperation to get away from the darkness of The Knight. Maybe a need to urgently ring old bells of fear before an election. Or both. Last week put a sorry light on the Abbott Government’s approach to climate change.

It is confused. It remains neither conservative nor Liberal. It underplays risk, undermines market mechanisms and distorts policy analysis. It is time to reconsider.

Last Tuesday the Abbott Government quietly released “Climate Change in Australia”.  This is a remarkable update of CSIRO and Bureau of Meteorology analysis of current and forecast climate impacts.  This information-rich interactive website is primarily for natural resource management, but the implications are clear for the broader economy.

At least, unlike the Newman Government, the federal government hasn’t simply whited out references to climate change. But there was not a peep from the feds in support of the CSIRO/BoM research, let alone any idea of how they intend to take it forward.

No “our nation’s premier scientific agencies are warning us that the foundations of our economy and society are at risk”. No “it’s time we treat this seriously because it will reshape Australia over the coming decades”. No “for our national wellbeing we must manage the unavoidable while redoubling our efforts to avoid the unmanageable.” Nothing.

At least the data is out there.

This omission was compounded in a tired sledge on the performance of the carbon pricing mechanism. In an ongoing travesty of public policy analysis, the Environment Minister distorted the data on the carbon laws’ emissions impact, and ignored the investments in clean technologies, as well as    the tax cuts and pension increases funded by carbon pricing revenue.

He claimed that the carbon price’s success was minimal because total national emissions fell by only 2.9 million tonnes over the two years to July 2014.

In fact, annual emissions from the electricity sector, the sector most directly affected by the carbon price, declined by 19 million tonnes over this period. This represents a steeper drop than in previous years. Some of it was cancelled out by rising emissions in sectors where the carbon price signal was minimal (transport, fugitive emissions) or absent (agriculture, deforestation).

The government itself reports the short-lived carbon price is responsible for reducing emissions by 40 million tonnes compared to business as usual. This figure is one of the foundations of the claim that it has become easier for Australia to reach its minimum 5 per cent emission reduction target.

fact check of the Minister’s emission claims made the point that electricity emission reductions under the carbon price were mainly due to hydro generators running down their water supplies to take advantage of temporarily higher wholesale electricity prices. This effect overstates the short-term impact of the carbon price.

On the other hand, some companies that might have invested in emission reductions if the price was expected to stay in force may have held off instead (perhaps to wait to be paid to do so through the Emission Reduction Fund). This would understate the impact of the carbon price.

ClimateWorks Australia found that carbon price uncertainty affected investment decisions across a range of industries. This is very important to remember because the real value of the carbon price is its effect on medium- and longer-term decision-making.

It is important to remember that the fixed price was due to switch this year to a trading scheme with a national emission limit. The legislated default limit would have started at 12 million tonnes below the priced emissions of 2012-13 (and fallen another 12 million tonnes each year). This means that the short-term hydro effect would have contributed to deeper national emission reductions over following years. Electricity companies would have had to make up for the fall in hydro supply and the rise in coal emissions by finding reductions elsewhere in the economy and/or by accessing international permits. We estimated that just the default cap could have cut Australia’s net emissions by 15 per cent by 2020.

What about the impact on electricity prices? The Minister claimed electricity bills are 9 per cent lower than they would have been if the carbon laws had been kept.

In fact, the previous government projected a 9 per cent increase in power prices due to the carbon price, and supported middle- and low-income households accordingly with tax cuts and pension increases. Actual impacts were slightly lower: abolishing the carbon price lowered electricity prices by 6.9 per cent in NSW, 8.3 per cent in Qld and 7.7 per cent in Victoria. SA and Tasmania saw even lower falls.  Budget papers showed the inflation impact was, as expected, less than one per cent.

So analysis from NATSEM and CSIRO – which found the vast majority of households would be better off under the reforms – are ignored.

With the mid-year deadline to submit its post-2020 climate targets to the international community fast approaching, the Government urgently needs to reconsider its position. The UK Government shows that Conservatives can support effective climate policies, while the NSW government shows that being Liberal isn’t an obstacle either. The conservative OECD, IMF and World Bank talk openly of the need to decarbonise economies and hasten renewable energy’s growth.  For a range of reasons the federal government would benefit from a more sensible, evidence-based approach to climate policy.

 

Comments

2 responses to “Australia government must reconsider climate approach”

  1. Keith Avatar
    Keith

    This discussion may become possible when Tony Abbott has been replaced as PM, although it will need several other ministers to disappear too.

  2. Farmer Dave Avatar
    Farmer Dave

    Well said, John. I find it extraordinary that the Government can apparently ignore the advice of climate scientists in formulating their response to climate change and are not challenged. One of the most obvious questions that Ministers should be asked is “what is the name of the climate scientist who has advised you that the 5% emissions reduction target is an adequate response?” I have never heard a question along those lines being asked. In all other policy areas we are used to seeing Ministers actively and publicly seeking the advice of technical experts. We see Ministers meeting with Intelligence agencies when discussing terrorism, we see Ministers meeting with health experts when discussing Ebola, but we never see Ministers meeting with climate scientists when discussing climate change.

    The point I am trying to make is not that the Government consists mostly of climate science deniers (which is obviously true), it is that the reasonable expectation of voters that the Government seeks advice from experts is totally ignored in this policy area, yet the Government are not challenged on it. I have never heard any of the environment groups, the Greens or the Labor Party challenge the Government on this. Why? I think it is a major political weakness, and it goes unexploited. Why?

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