Zürcher Nachrichten - Australia's new climate promise meets mining reality

EUR -
AED 4.311383
AFN 80.689649
ALL 97.605582
AMD 450.665792
ANG 2.100733
AOA 1076.366783
ARS 1503.320158
AUD 1.788675
AWG 2.115171
AZN 2.000105
BAM 1.958914
BBD 2.371952
BDT 143.608298
BGN 1.957467
BHD 0.442417
BIF 3501.556007
BMD 1.173791
BND 1.505231
BOB 8.117077
BRL 6.527432
BSD 1.174707
BTN 101.670628
BWP 15.772141
BYN 3.844443
BYR 23006.303709
BZD 2.359712
CAD 1.609104
CDF 3391.08264
CHF 0.933305
CLF 0.028613
CLP 1122.485065
CNY 8.397349
CNH 8.412807
COP 4823.694137
CRC 593.458604
CUC 1.173791
CUP 31.105462
CVE 110.44057
CZK 24.558412
DJF 208.606599
DKK 7.464119
DOP 71.275738
DZD 151.988957
EGP 57.621523
ERN 17.606865
ETB 163.480167
FJD 2.63364
FKP 0.867917
GBP 0.874111
GEL 3.181432
GGP 0.867917
GHS 12.275515
GIP 0.867917
GMD 84.51337
GNF 10194.20599
GTQ 9.016487
GYD 245.770708
HKD 9.214084
HNL 30.7599
HRK 7.535274
HTG 154.157695
HUF 396.267195
IDR 19199.699478
ILS 3.936138
IMP 0.867917
INR 101.477641
IQD 1538.846343
IRR 49431.278201
ISK 142.205233
JEP 0.867917
JMD 187.377879
JOD 0.832264
JPY 173.277422
KES 151.65826
KGS 102.476414
KHR 4705.600881
KMF 491.235989
KPW 1056.390967
KRW 1622.842408
KWD 0.358406
KYD 0.978956
KZT 640.133998
LAK 25323.905293
LBP 105255.769578
LKR 354.44555
LRD 235.526429
LSL 20.849455
LTL 3.4659
LVL 0.710015
LYD 6.341081
MAD 10.563593
MDL 19.75841
MGA 5188.380707
MKD 61.660124
MMK 2464.391977
MNT 4210.728168
MOP 9.497699
MRU 46.88253
MUR 53.302294
MVR 18.08077
MWK 2036.938173
MXN 21.788735
MYR 4.955163
MZN 75.07563
NAD 20.848744
NGN 1798.166097
NIO 43.224111
NOK 11.929526
NPR 162.676769
NZD 1.952267
OMR 0.451318
PAB 1.174697
PEN 4.160171
PGK 4.86874
PHP 67.07868
PKR 332.893353
PLN 4.249499
PYG 8798.987976
QAR 4.282007
RON 5.069725
RSD 117.180775
RUB 93.140377
RWF 1697.999353
SAR 4.403405
SBD 9.72497
SCR 17.240676
SDG 704.865814
SEK 11.17574
SGD 1.503357
SHP 0.922415
SLE 26.938939
SLL 24613.815124
SOS 671.378747
SRD 43.035291
STD 24295.10394
STN 24.539638
SVC 10.27834
SYP 15262.668311
SZL 20.841487
THB 38.028525
TJS 11.21853
TMT 4.120006
TND 3.429452
TOP 2.74914
TRY 47.599343
TTD 7.987903
TWD 34.599882
TZS 3007.84067
UAH 49.117383
UGX 4211.839198
USD 1.173791
UYU 47.054804
UZS 14863.629091
VES 141.17584
VND 30688.76584
VUV 140.241829
WST 3.213239
XAF 657.018271
XAG 0.030697
XAU 0.000352
XCD 3.172229
XCG 2.11712
XDR 0.814652
XOF 657.001452
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.825369
ZAR 20.847679
ZMK 10565.531807
ZMW 27.400142
ZWL 377.960225
  • RBGPF

    7.0000

    75

    +9.33%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4000

    13.1

    -3.05%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    22.45

    +0.09%

  • RELX

    -0.9810

    52.729

    -1.86%

  • BP

    0.0450

    32.175

    +0.14%

  • SCS

    0.0750

    10.585

    +0.71%

  • RIO

    -0.9200

    62.91

    -1.46%

  • BTI

    -0.2950

    52.325

    -0.56%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.4350

    37.795

    -1.15%

  • NGG

    -0.3200

    71.91

    -0.45%

  • AZN

    -1.1500

    72.53

    -1.59%

  • VOD

    -0.1080

    11.412

    -0.95%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    22.88

    +0.13%

  • BCC

    1.2950

    87.725

    +1.48%

  • BCE

    -0.2950

    24.135

    -1.22%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    13.09

    -0.46%

Australia's new climate promise meets mining reality
Australia's new climate promise meets mining reality / Photo: PETER PARKS - AFP

Australia's new climate promise meets mining reality

Flood, fire and drought-battered Australia is trying to clean up its act on climate change, but dependence on fossil fuel riches could stymie the national makeover.

Text size:

Centre-left Prime Minister Anthony Albanese swept to power in May promising weary Australians that he would tackle climate change.

He followed through on a key plank of that promise Thursday, nearly doubling the country's 2030 emissions reduction target to 43 percent.

Albanese faces a thorny dilemma: Australians want real steps to slow global heating, but they live in a country that depends on exporting the fossil fuels that cause it.

Australia's emissions -- while high per person -- account for just over one percent of global emissions.

Much more significant are the fossil fuels dug up in Australia and burned overseas.

Estimates differ, but these could account for anywhere between three and five percent of global emissions, making Australia one of the world's largest carbon polluters.

Another beneficiary of the May election wants to put an end to that.

"You don't end the climate wars by opening up new coal and gas mines," said Australian Greens leader Adam Bandt, whose party now holds the balance of power in the Senate and wants radical energy reform in return for working with the government.

The sticking point for the Greens, Bandt told AFP, was that the government had pledged support for 114 new coal and gas projects already in Australia's investment pipeline.

Modelling by the Greens found these projects would more than double Australia's emissions.

"None of these new projects the government wants to open are factored into their climate modelling," Bandt said.

- Wilder climate -

First discovered in 1791, Australia's vast coal deposits make it the world's second-largest exporter.

It is also one of the top exporters of gas -- mostly natural gas and gas exploited from coal seams.

Fossil fuels account for about a quarter of Australian exports, with most destined for Japan, China and South Korea, according to Reserve Bank of Australia analysis.

Domestically, about 70 percent of electricity comes from coal and gas, according to official figures.

Given the economic sensitivities, the Albanese government has so far dodged calls to set a deadline for withdrawal from the sector, arguing international markets will decide when coal is no longer viable.

The approach may quell dissent from the coal and gas industry, used to getting its way after a decade of conservative governments.

But it could cause economic turmoil, with central bank analysts warning coal demand could fall by up to 80 percent by the middle of the decade, leaving "stranded assets" that cannot be sold.

Already the strains are starting to show.

Mining giant BHP on Thursday announced it had been unable to sell its coal assets in the populous state of New South Wales.

The country's largest energy producer and carbon emitter AGL is also facing an uncertain future.

When AGL tried to split off the most polluting parts of its business, green-minded tech billionaire Mike Cannon-Brookes sought to buy the company to stop the plan.

His bid was rejected, but Cannon-Brookes successfully lobbied fellow investors to block the demerger, arguing it would hurt shareholders and delay coal-fired power station closures.

Greenpeace Australia's chief executive David Ritter said AGL's experience was a lesson to listen to the call for climate action.

"Every corporation that makes the same mistakes can expect to also run into real turbulence very, very quickly," he told AFP.

This turbulence will come from activists, but also from the Australian public who have seen first-hand how a wilder climate can turn on them.

- After the 'Black Summer' -

Australia's 2019-20 "Black Summer" bushfires scorched 24 million hectares of land, cloaked cities in smoke, and killed more than 30 people along with an estimated tens of millions of wild animals.

In the two subsequent years, dramatic floods swamped Australia's east coast, this year killing more than 20 people as waters reached rooftops and torrents swept cars off roads.

Before the bushfires, veteran firefighter Greg Mullins tried to warn the government it was not prepared for the infernos to come.

For 14 years, Mullins had led the fire service in Australia's largest state, New South Wales, and he was joined by other retired emergency services leaders in sounding the alarm that climate change had dramatically escalated the fire threat.

"It was all political. Because we mentioned climate change, they just locked us out," he told AFP.

He and fellow members of Emergency Leaders for Climate Action are calling for far more ambitious emissions cuts -- 75 percent by 2030.

"We've lost the last decade of climate action, they've got to do a lot of catching up," he said.

M.Hug--NZN