Thursday, 6 September 2018
The world is running out of patience with Australia: Europe warns Morrison Government
Europe has strongly signalled that the Morrison Coalition Government needs to stop pretending it has a national climate change policy and keep the pledge to cut greenhouse gas emissions made under the November 2016 U.N. Paris Agreement which the Australian Government ratified and, on the government's part contained such a pitifully weak commitment to a 2030 abatement target i.e. emissions reduced by 26 to 28 per cent below 2005 levels.
The
Sydney Morning Herald,
31 August 2018:
The Coalition's internal
climate war risks damaging the economy after Europe declared it would reject a
$15 billion trade deal with Australia unless the Morrison government keeps its
pledge to cut pollution under the Paris accord.
Prime Minister Scott
Morrison this week reset his government’s course on energy policy, declaring a
focus on lowering electricity bills and increasing reliability, while
relegating efforts to cut dangerous greenhouse gas emissions.
He has reaffirmed his
government’s commitment to the Paris accord despite persistent calls by
conservative Coalition MPs, led by Tony Abbott, to quit the agreement.
However there is deep
uncertainty over how Australia will meet the Paris goal of reducing Australia’s
carbon emissions by 26 per cent by 2030 given the government does not have
a national strategy to meet the target.
The policy ructions did
not go unnoticed at a meeting of the European Parliament's Committee on
International Trade in Brussels, where the EU’s chief negotiator on the deal,
Helena König, faced angry questions from the floor over Australia’s commitment
to climate action.
Australia and the EU
will in November enter a second round of negotiations over the deal that would
end restrictions on Australian exports and collectively
add $15 billion to both economies.
In a video of this
week's proceedings, Ms König told the committee that “it’s the [European]
Commission’s position ... that we are talking about respect and full
implementation of the Paris agreement [as part of the trade deal]”.
“No doubt we will see
what comes out in the text [of the deal agreement] but that I expect to be the
minimum in the text, for sure.”
Her assertion is a clear
signal that any failure by Australia to meet its international climate
obligations would have serious economic consequences.
Ms König fired off the
warning after a question by Klaus Buchner, a German Greens member of the
Parliament who said “the intention of the new Australian regime to withdraw
from the Paris Agreement unsettles not only Australians”.
“Australia is by far the
biggest exporter of coal in the world ... what will the commission do when
Australia does indeed withdraw from the Paris agreement? Is this a red line for
us in these discussions or do we just accept it?
“I believe as the
largest trading block in the world we have a responsibility to go beyond pure
profits.”
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