Dr Fisher feels the heat....
Monday, 6 May 2019
Climate change policy scare campaign does the rounds again
A scary
headline from 7 West Media and Kerry Stokes**….
Fossil fuel
industry analyst and economist Dr. Brian Fisher has issued another
warning about what he apparently believes is the folly of tackling climate
change……
The
Sydney Morning Herald,
2 May 2019, p.1:
Opposition Leader Bill
Shorten is facing an explosive political row over his climate change policy as
industry warns of rising costs and a new economic study predicts 167,000 fewer
jobs by 2030 under the Labor plan.
Business groups backed
the ambition to reduce greenhouse gas emissions but said they deserved more
detail given they would pay for the scheme, in a rebuke to Labor's claim it was
"impossible" to model the costs of its policy on employers and the
economy.
The new warning from
economist Brian Fisher, which is hotly disputed by Labor and countered by other
experts, marks a dramatic escalation in the political fight over the cost of
taking action on climate change compared to the cost of inaction.
Dr Fisher concluded that
the Labor emissions target would subtract at least 264 billion from gross
national product by 2030 and as much as26 4billion from gross national product by
2030 and as much a s542 billion, depending on the rules for big companies to
buy international carbon permits to meet their targets.
"Negative
consequences for real wages and employment are projected under all scenarios,
with a minimum 3 per cent reduction in real wages and 167,000 less jobs in 2030
compared to what otherwise would have occurred," he concluded.
"Labor's plan
results in a cumulative GNP loss over the period from 2021 to 2030 that is over
three times larger than that occurring under the Coalition policy. Turning to
other results, the wholesale electricity price under Labor's climate policy is
around 20 per cent higher than that resulting from the Coalition policy."
Labor has been bracing
for Dr Fisher's report after weeks of conflicting claims over the cost of its
policies.
But Australian National
University professor Warwick McKibbin cautioned against some of the claims,
telling the Herald two weeks ago that the impact of Labor's proposals would be
a "small fraction" of the economy by 2030.
Professor McKibbin
estimates the Coalition and Labor policies would subtract about 0.4 per cent
from the economy by 2030.
The cumulative value of
economic output has been broadly tipped to be about $30 trillion by 2030, which
means Dr Fisher's worst-case scenario equates to less than 2 per cent of output
over that period.
An earlier version of Dr
Fisher's modelling triggered headlines of a "carbon cut apocalypse"
in March but was questioned by other economists, who said he had assumed very
high costs for renewable energy generation and the cost of reducing emissions.
ANU professor Frank
Jotzo said in March that Dr Fisher's work had used "absurd cost
assumptions" about emissions abatement.
Dr Fisher was the
executive director of the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource
Economics for many years and conducted the modelling at his firm, BAEconomics.
He said this was not commissioned or paid for by the government.
While heavily disputed,
Mr Morrison is expected to use the results to mount an escalating campaign
against Mr Shorten ahead of the May 18 poll….
However
Fisher’s original research did not appear to be using Labor’s current climate
policy to produce his ‘results’ and
his
current effort published on 1 May 2019 is still deliberately misleading.
Fisher gets
called out….
Mirage
News, 2 May
2019:
THE CLIMATE COUNCIL is
calling on Brian Fisher to come clean about his links to the fossil fuel
industry, following the release of his “independent” modelling looking at the
cost of Labor’s climate policy.
“Mr Fisher has a history
of working closely with fossil fuel industries. How can his research be
‘independent’?” asked the Climate Council’s Head of Research, Dr Martin Rice.
“Mr Fisher’s work has
been at odds with credible economic literature which shows that strong action
on climate change can be achieved at a modest price, while the costs of
inaction are substantial,” said Dr Rice.
“We should be having a
conversation about the escalating costs of climate change and the very real
economic pain Australia will suffer for failing to act,” said Dr Rice.
“Since the Coalition has
been in government, greenhouse gas emissions have gone up and up and up.
Meanwhile, Australians are on the frontline of worsening extreme weather as the
climate is changing,” he said.
“We urgently need to
reduce our greenhouse gas emissions There’s credible, independent research that
finds Australia can drive down its emissions by more than 45% with minimal
impact on the economy,” he said……
The first
report in a nutshell….
Climate
Council, 20 March
2019:
What’s the story?
Fossil fuel industry
consultant Brian Fisher has released so-called “independent” modelling looking
at the economic cost of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, but his research is
deeply flawed.
Who is Brian Fisher?
Brian Fisher is the
fossil fuel industry’s go-to consultant. The industry has paid for much of
Fisher’s so-called ‘research’.
Is the modelling
credible?
No. Fisher’s report
fails to consider the economic benefits for Australia from investing in
renewable energy and new technologies as well as failing to quantify the costs
of not acting to prevent climate change.
Several of his findings
are implausible. For example, his findings on electricity prices are contrary
to a range of detailed Australian studies showing more renewable energy means
lower wholesale electricity prices.
This is a distraction.
The Federal Government
has a poor record on climate change and is running a scare campaign to distract
from this. Since the Liberal National Party has been in government, pollution
has gone up, electricity and gas prices have gone up and extreme weather events
have worsened.
An
explanation of how economic modelling is used….
The
Guardian, 21
February 2019:
Whenever Australia
starts to have a serious conversation about addressing climate change,
headlines appear in newspapers of an economic apocalypse. This happened again
in the Australian this week based
on work by a long-standing economic modeller of climate policy, Brian
Fisher.
So, what do economic
modelling exercises tell us of the impact of reducing Australia’s contribution
to global warming, and more importantly, what do they not? Should we cower in
fear of action or embrace the inevitable change and manage the human and
economic costs of transition?
Firstly, economic
modelling results are not predictions. They are based on hypothetical future
worlds. Economists try to capture the dynamics of economic systems in their
models to understand the relative impact of different policy options. This
means they are always wrong because economists can’t predict the future.
Economic
modellers are not the crystal ball gazers we read about in fantasy books……
This does not mean the
economic models are not useful, it just means they should be used to test the
relative impact of different policy options and not be presented as predictions
of the future. They have a long history of overestimating the costs of
environmental regulations because people and markets can innovate faster than
they often expect.
Secondly, the way
economic modelling results are presented is very important. Industry groups in
particular like to attach themselves to particular results and scream that
thousands of jobs will be lost, or wages will be slashed. This is designed to
scare people into not acting on climate change by making them feel insecure in
their lives. The headlines
in the Australian did
just this.
It is also dishonest
because they also don’t clearly put the results in the context of the broader
change in the economy. (David Gruen, one of Australia’s top economic officials
gave a great speech about
this in 2008 to illustrate how long this silliness has been going on.)
To illustrate my point,
the economic impacts Fischer has projected for different emissions targets are
in the same ballpark of those projected for work commissioned
by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade a few years ago. This work also
presented results in a similar way to the Australian. However, what is also
showed is that the economy, jobs, income, etc continued to grow regardless. We
keep getting richer and have more jobs, we just do so at a slightly slower
rate.
Thirdly, because
Australia exports a lot of coal and other emissions-intensive products to other
countries, what they do matters an awful lot to the Australian economy. As
other nations reduce emissions, demand for these products falls regardless of
what we do. It has been established for some time that a significant part of
the economic impacts of climate change on Australia comes from things we can’t
control and this is generally presented in the results (see here for
an example). While he does not report this, Brian Fisher knows this because he
spearheaded economic analysis in the 1990s that was targeted at convincing
Japan, one of our major coal markets, it would be too costly for them to reduce
emissions.
Lastly, whenever these
headlines are blasted across the papers one point is always lost: these results
don’t include the cost of climate change itself. This summer, we have again
seen a glimmer of what climate change will mean for Australia. Recent economic
analysis indicates the benefits of limiting global warming far outweigh the
cost of doing so, in one case by 70-1 (a good summary is here).
(Again, this is something Fisher has considered in the past as he once said it
would be cheaper to move people from the Pacific and put them in condos on the
Gold Coast than act on climate change.)
So, as we head into another
cycle of climate change politics in Canberra, beware the economic doomsayers
and the threats from industry groups that credible action will be a “wrecking
ball” to the economy. To be glib, no one said saving the Earth would be free.
Acting on climate change will have costs but the costs of not acting will be
far, far larger. Better that we come together and manage a fair and effective
transition than continuing to delay and pay a much, much greater bill later…..
Dr Fisher feels the heat....
Dr Fisher feels the heat....
Fisher now accuses the Morrison Government of sitting on a second report modelling cost to the mining and resources sector of climate action, which was commissioned
in the lead up to the federal election campaign and, which the Department of
Industry, Innovation and Science confirms it has received.
Fisher appears to believe that this report to which he was a contributor will buttress his claims and silence his critics.
However, to date Morrison and Co have not released this report so two possiblities exist: (i) the report's conclusions tend to support Labor climate action policy or (ii) the report's conclusions are based on such flawed assumptions that it will be easily unpicked by genuinely independent experts.
Preferences show the quality of the politiciian
Kevin Hogan rising from his seat among Coalition MPs to greet his prime minister |
Nationals MP for Page Kevin Hogan has never voted against Coalition policy positions or the Abbott-Turnbull Morrison Government's proposed motions and bills being considered by the House of Representatives.
When the media coverage were going badly against the newly installed Morrison Coalition Government he took fright and declared he was that grotesque chimera - an "Independent National".
As a so-called "Independent National" Hogan is still a member of the National Party of Australia, still attends Nationals partyroom meeting, remains the Nationals Whip in the House of Representatives and also remains the Morrison Government's Deputy Speaker and never - I repeat never - votes against Coalition policy positions or the Morrison Government's proposed motions and bills.
Holding this unofficial title of convenience also means that Hogan rarely if ever sits on the cross benches with the genuine Independents.
Hogan's how-to-vote cards mailled out during this federal election campaign also reflect the fact that he remains a National Party member of parliament with allegiance to Prime Minister Morrison and Deputy Prime Minister McCormack.
His voting preferences for the House of Representatives ballot are:
1. Kevin Hogan - National Party of Australia
2. John Damien Mudge - United Australia Party (UAP) - party leader Clive Palmer
3. Peter Walker - Christian Democratic Party (Fred Nile Group)
4. Fiona Leviny - former Nationals member and current Independent
5. Alison Waters - Animal Justice Party
6. Dan Reid - The Australian Greens
7. Patrick Deegan - Australian Labor Party (ALP)
Hogan's voting preferences for the Senate ballot are:
1. Liberal & Nationals, party leaders Scott Morrison & Michael McCormack
2. Christian Democratic Party (Fred Nile Group)
3. United Australia Party (UAP), party leader Clive Palmer
4. Liberal Democratic Party, acting federal party leader Andrew Cooper replacing David Leyonhjelm
5. Australian Conservatives, party leader Corey Bernardi
6. The Small Business Party, party leader Angela Vithoulkas
So there you have it. Kevin Hogan favours hard right candidates similar to himself, is willing to continue supporting climate change denialists, as well as politicians and wannabee politicians who wish to foist their personal religious beliefs on the Australian population and/or wish to suppress ordinary workers wages, and is publicly throwing his support behind one particular party leader who became infamous by stealing wages owed to his employees after sacking them, then leaving taxpayers footing the bill for the economic destruction he caused.
The only reason Hogan is not preferencing racist candidates representing Pauline Hanson's One Nation and Fraser Anning's Conservative Nationals Party (as his prime minister is doing) is that these parties are not fielding candidates in the Page electorate.
Sunday, 5 May 2019
Thirteen days out from the 2019 Australian federal election and the polls look like this
Newspoll, published 5 May 2019
Primary Vote – Coalition 38 (unchanged) Labor 36 (down 1 point)
Voter Net Satisfaction with Leaders – Morrison -1 (unchanged) Shorten -18
(down 6 points)
This is the 54th consecutive Newspoll in which Labor leads on a Two Party Preferred (TPP) basis.
The last time the Coaltion scored a higher TPP than Labor was on election day in 2016.
Between the 19 June 2017 and the 5 May 2019 Newspoll the Coalition only bested Labor on a Primary Vote basis 11 times out of a total of 42 polls. Only 3 of those higher primary vote scores occurred after Scott Morrison ousted Malcolm Turnbull as prime minister.
IPSOS poll, published 5 May 2019
Labels:
elections 2019,
poll,
statistics
These days it is hard to tell the Liberal Party and One Nation apart
In its frantic pursuit of every right wing vote it can muster, the Liberal Party of Australia has chosen candidates from among the type of anti-science, chauvinistic, racist, homophobic bigots usually found swimming in One Nation's pool.....
@vanbadham
Anti-feminist former law professor and current Liberal candidate in the Curtain electorate Celia Hammond believes anthropomorphic global warming is minimal at best.
Liberal candidate in Chisholm electorate Lucy Liu stated Chinese
people come to Australia because they want ... good things for their next
generation, not to be destroyed – they used the word destroyed – by these sort
of concepts, of same-sex, transgender and inter-gender, cross gender, and all
of this rubbish as well as conducting a WeChat campaign against Victoria’s Safe Schools policy ahead of the 2016 election, when she was the head of the Liberal Party’s Victorian community engagement committee.
Then there is the Liberal candidate for the Lyons electorate Jessica Whelan came out of the gates fighting and who apparently intended to refer the anti-Muslim tweet she allegedly posted on her own account to the Australian Federal Police in the hope of neutralising any further questions from the media - claiming her account was 'hacked'. However, further tweets emerged and the Liberal Party is no longer fielding her as their candidate. So the count is now four Liberal Party candidates disendorsed just thirteen days out from the federal election.
NOTE: In April 2019 the Liberal Party also had to acknowledge three of their preselected candidates in Victoria pulled out of the election because of section 44, the constitutional career killer the Australian Electoral Commission has specifically warned candidates about this year.
UPDATE By 9 May 2019 the Liberal candidate in Scullin electorate Gurpal Singh was asked to resign by party due to homophobic and sexist social media comments. |
Are ineligible candidates standing at the 18 May 2019 federal election?
Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) Disclaimer: The AEC has
no power under the Electoral Act to make any determination in relation to the
qualification checklist in a person’s nomination, except as to whether the
person has answered every mandatory question, and provided additional
documentation where required. The candidate must be satisfied that the
additional documents support their contentions in the Qualification Checklist
and that they are qualified under the Constitution and the laws of the
Commonwealth to be elected as a Senator or a member of the House of
Representatives.
The
Guardian, 26
April 2019:
At least 19 United
Australia party candidates have submitted incomplete or inconsistent
information to the Australian Electoral Commission, failing to provide evidence
they are eligible to run for parliament.
The candidates for Clive
Palmer’s party have asserted they are not dual citizens disqualified by section
44 of the constitution, but have mostly failed to provide birth details of
their parents or grandparents, even in cases where candidates admit parents or
grandparents were born overseas.
In one case the UAP
candidate for Blaxland, Nadeem Ashraf, claimed in a statutory declaration that
he lost dual Pakistani citizenship automatically when he became Australian in
1986. Even when taking up another citizenship Pakistani law requires
a declaration of renunciation, which Ashraf failed to provide.
A spokesman for the
United Australia party told Guardian Australia “all [candidates] are eligible
and compliant under s44”, but failed to explain why they had not completed the
checklist.
A spokesman for the AEC
said it had no “power to reject a fully completed candidate nomination for the
Senate or the House of Representatives, regardless of whether any answer to a
question of the qualification checklist is incorrect, false or inadequate”.
At least 16 UAP
candidates stated that they were born in Australia, declared they had parents
or grandparents born in another country but then failed to provide details.
These include Matthew Sirianni-Duffy in Aston, Wayne
Connolly in Goldstein, Lisa Bentley in Gellibrand, Ron Jean in Dunkley, George
Zoraya in Chisholm, Adam Veitch in Bendigo, Neil Harvey in Corangamite, Lynda
Abdo in Hume, Colin Thompson in Dawson, Christian Julius in Griffith, Kenneth
Law in Groom, Jatinder Singh in Holt, Shane Wheatland in Indi, Tony Seals in
Isaacs, Md Sarwar Hasan in Maribyrnong, Tony Pecora in Melbourne, Adam Holt in
Sydney and Yohan Batzke, a Queensland Senate candidate.
The 45th parliament
was rocked
by 14 MPs or senators resigning or being ruled ineligible due to dual citizenship,
many of them triggered by citizenship by descent from parents or grandparents
born in the United Kingdom or New Zealand…..
The joint
standing committee on electoral matters has warned that the presence
of ineligible candidates on the ballot creates potential that “a successful
candidate could have their election challenged on the basis of preference flows
from an ineligible candidate”.
UAP is not alone in having candidates who did not fully compete their nomination forms. It would appear that a number of candidates from more than one political party have also submitted forms unaccompanied by required documentation.
Voters can check the nomination forms of candidates standing in their electorate at
https://www.aec.gov.au/election/candidates.htm.
Labels:
elections 2019,
eligibility
Saturday, 4 May 2019
Best Political Meme of the Week
Labels:
elections 2019,
Scott Morrison
Best billboard of the 2019 federal election campaign
Labels:
election campaigns,
elections 2019,
Scott Morrison
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