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Australia dumps carbon price, as repeal passes Senate

The Abbott government’s quest to abolish Australia’s carbon pricing scheme and unravel its renewable energy support mechanisms is finally complete, with the federal Senate voting this morning to pass the Carbon Tax Repeal Bill and seven related bills through the upper house without amendment, 39 to 32.

The vote’s outcome – which gives Australia the dubious distinction of becoming the first country in the world to remove a price on carbon established to combat climate change – was greeted by rather limp applause from the cross benches, as well as a couple of celebratory outbursts from Tony Abbott’s Coalition of climate deniers; and was roundly condemned by Labor and the Greens, who variously described it as an “appalling” day for Australia and a failure of leadership.

“A vote for the abolition of the clean energy package is a vote for failure,” said Greens leader Christine Milne ahead of the Bill’s third reading. “A failure to understand that the future is going to be powered by renewable energy.”

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Passing of the carbon tax repeal bills in the senate this morning

Tasmanian Labor Senator Lisa Singh said it marked a fundamental moment when Australia was going backwards.

“This is an appalling day for Australia, when a government, rather than lead in the …race to the future, is determined to stick with the past,” she said.

“This will be a short-lived victory for the Abbott government, because Australians will not stand for it. People will understand very quickly that the supposed benefits of repealing (this Bill) will not be realised.”

Liberal Senator Ian McDonald, meanwhile, seized the moment to fly his party’s true colours on climate:

“As one who at the very beginning of this debate crossed the floor against my own party at the time, I would just like to say a couple of words on the final debate on this long running issue.

First of all, you’ve heard from the Greens political party – the ultimate of hypocrisy. The Australian people clearly at the last election voted on what everyone knew was a referendum on the carbon tax to get rid of the carbon tax.

It’s typical that the Greens think they know better than everyone and want to guide everyone.

If there is global warming, notwithstanding that in Brisbane on Saturday morning we had the coldest day in 113 years – but I have always indicated, Mr deputy president I have an open mind on this.”

National Party Senator Barnaby Joyce continued in the same vein: “You look at the weather today. Look at the way you’re dressed. No one thinks it’s too hot,” he said after the vote.

Abbott, himself, stayed away from comments about the weather, sticking – in an email to supporters entitled “the Carbon Tax is gone!”– to his well worn script that about this being a win for Australian families and small businesses.

“Scrapping the Carbon Tax will save the average family $550 a year,” Abbott wrote. “You’ll see the benefits in coming power bills.”

But will we? Labor and the Greens (not to mention a number of fairly prominent economists and analysts) have serious doubts.

“Not only will households have to deal with global warming, but the $550 they now think they’re getting? Forget it. It’s a mirage,” said Greens Leader Christine Milne on Wednesday.

“In the Senate today, Finance Minister Cormann couldn’t answer even the most basic questions about what the legislation will do. Either he doesn’t know or he doesn’t care.

“Clive Palmer’s amendments have turned out to be a yellow tape mess that will be a big shock to households and business.”

Richard Denniss, director of The Australia Institute, said that any businesses wanting ”certainty” on climate policy – and which therefore argued for the repeal of the carbon tax – had not got what they wanted.

“The irony is that for all their talk about the need for certainty all they’ve done is lengthen the time for uncertainty,” Denniss said. “There will be a carbon price in Australia in 10 years’ time. I just don’t know whether there will be one in three years’ time.”

Leader of the Opposition, Bill Shorten, responded to today’s vote with a joint statement from the shadow minister for environment, Mark Butler, saying that the Abbott Government was “determined to hurt Australians,” with its unfair Budget and by refusing to tackle climate change.

“History will judge Tony Abbott harshly for refusing to believe that action is needed on climate change,” the statement read. Tony Abbott will do anything to try and ignore the science of climate change. It’s clear that he still thinks it is – in his own words – ‘absolute crap’.

“With the clean energy package now on Tony Abbott’s growing scrap pile of good policies, renewable energy is now in his sights.

“Tony Abbott is attempting to abolish the Australian Renewable Energy Agency and Clean Energy Finance Corporation and undermine investment in renewable energy by spreading myths about the impact of renewable energy on the cost of electricity.”

Today’s vote was the Carbon Tax Repeal Bill’s third time around in the Senate, after various motions for amendments from the cross benches – namely the Palmer United Party – and the Greens muddied proceedings.

A PUP-proposed amendment which was passed as a result of last week’s chaos imposes the ACCC’s powers to enforce the passing on of reduced energy prices not just on big energy retailers but also on “any entity that produces electricity.”

Screen Shot 2014-07-17 at 1.37.06 PMAmendments moved by Labor to move to an emissions trading scheme, and to stop huge cuts to ARENA, both failed, as did a Greens amendment attempting to ensure that houses with solar panels aren’t caught by the regulator’s new powers to ensure that electricity prices fall as a consequence of the carbon tax repeal.

Outside of political circles, Climate Institute CEO John Connor described the successful repeal as “an historic act of irresponsibility and recklessness.”

“The last seven years have been a sorry and sordid tale of greed, incompetence and rotten luck, which has reduced Australian policy making to scaremongering, self-interest and reckless short termism,” said Connor.

“With the Senate’s vote today, Australia not only lurches to the back of the pack of countries taking action on climate, but sees the responsibility of emission reductions shift from major polluters to the taxpayer.

“Today we lose a credible framework of limiting pollution that was a firm foundation for a fair dinkum Australian contribution to global climate efforts.”

“What we are left with as potential replacement policy rests on three wobbly legs – a Government fund subject to an annual budgetary arm wrestle, uncertain non-binding limits on some company emissions, and a renewable energy target under assault.”

Environment Victoria’s Mark Wakeham said: “The Abbott Government has today made every existing and proposed renewable energy project in Australia less profitable. It’s a great shame that Clive Palmer and Ricky Muir, who have both talked about their love of renewable energy this week and the need to maintain the renewable energy target and agencies, sided with the Coalition to damage the clean energy industry today.”

The Australian Conservation Foundation said, “this backwards step makes Australia an international embarrassment.

“The Abbott Government and crossbench Senators who voted today to repeal the carbon price have left Australia without the necessary tools to meet our paltry international obligation to cut pollution by five per cent by 2020, let alone to reduce it to the levels scientists say are needed to avoid dangerous climate change.”

And here’s more from Twitter…

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Comments

25 responses to “Australia dumps carbon price, as repeal passes Senate”

  1. tsport100 Avatar
    tsport100

    Exercise your democratic right and help to accelerate the demise of Coal based power in Australia – install roof-top PV with battery storage asap!

    1. Mags Avatar
      Mags

      Let’s take this into our hands. Move to utilities that support renewables, as above install your own PV panels (they only need 3-4 years to pay back now), march on 31st August, and join any group that is working for a new ETS. Abbott has hastened his own demise with this one…

    2. Chris Marshalk Avatar
      Chris Marshalk

      Are there any battery storage units to purchase in Australia at this stage? There seems to be more and more discussion with storage but who’s selling them? It’s an emerging market.

  2. Pedro Avatar
    Pedro

    Well I am going to celebrate by tucking into a -$80 lamb roast tonight and count all the dollars I will be saving on everything.

  3. Pete Avatar
    Pete

    I’ll see the benefits in coming power bills but that’s because I’ve installed solar panels on my roof.

  4. John P Avatar
    John P

    The quotes above from the Libs and Nats demonstrate just how ill informed they are. Global warming is not about how hot or cold it gets on any given day.
    It is about the build up of thermal energy in the ecosystem – energy lying idle and ready to turbo charge the next big weather event so that we will get a bigger cyclone or heatwave than might otherwise have occurred.

    1. Sean Avatar
      Sean

      they don’t care about anyone with a brain, only the swing seats of western sydney. You can tell this by how frequently the phrase “western sydney” comes out of their mouths.

    2. Mags Avatar
      Mags

      Indeed John, it is a disgrace to have leaders who are so ill-informed about one of the most important issues for Australia and Planet. My 10 year old could describe weather/climate much better than either Joyce or McDonald.

      1. John P Avatar
        John P

        Exactly. The anti intellectual and anti science ethos of this administration is so depressing.
        Most year ten students know better than this lot.

  5. johnnewton Avatar
    johnnewton

    Counting the days tic toc tic toc tic toc…

  6. tokenpom Avatar
    tokenpom

    Okay Abbott, you’ve got your own way, or at least part of it, as you’ve removed the Carbon ‘Tax’ to save ordinary Australians money.

    So all you have to do now, is prove to them that having cut the ‘Tax’ they are now saving money.

    Or was it all just Bullsh*t after all ?

    #OneTermTony

    1. John P Avatar
      John P

      It wasn’t bullish,t, it was paying the piper who calls the tune.

  7. Chris Fraser Avatar
    Chris Fraser

    Ha ha … Methinks they are wise to have a try at being politicians … because they’ll never be able to measure climate objectively !

  8. John McKeon Avatar
    John McKeon

    Is this the darkness before the dawn, or should I play it safe and be a pessimist in utter despair?

  9. Chatteris Avatar
    Chatteris

    Makes you wonder what the collective noun is for a load of Canutes!

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