freediver
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http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/PM-sends-mixed-messages-on-ad-spending/2007/05/25/1179601652829.html
Federal Opposition Leader Kevin Rudd says Prime Minister John Howard is sending mixed messages about the government's plans for an information campaign on climate change.
Mr Howard on Thursday told parliament he had not approved any mail-out information to be sent to citizens about climate change.
But Fairfax reported on Friday the government was planning a $23 million information campaign designed to sell its "leadership role" on global warming.
"Yesterday in parliament, Mr Howard denied all knowledge of (the) government having signed any contracts for any new advertising campaign on climate change or the environment," he told reporters in Wyong, on the NSW Central Coast.
"Suddenly, mysteriously today we have a $23 million campaign about to burst onto our television sets and into our letterboxes ... Funny that."
"You can't have ... 11 years of climate change inaction and, indeed, denial and scepticism and then spend tens of millions of dollars of taxpayers' funds in the lead-up to the election to gain credibility on climate change and water."
Labor attacks PM on climate change ads
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Labor-attacks-PM-on-climate-change-ads/2007/05/29/1180205215097.html
Labor has accused Prime Minister John Howard of misleading parliament in continuing to hedge on whether the federal government planned a massive advertising blitz on climate change.
Labor water spokesman Anthony Albanese said Mr Howard, despite repeated questions on Monday, continued to deny the government had given final approval to an advertising campaign spruiking its climate change policies.
The opposition claims a $23 million blitz of commercials and mailouts would follow this week's report of Mr Howard's emissions trading task group.
Mr Albanese said the ads were actually in production.
PM dragged to embrace climate change: SA
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/PM-dragged-to-embrace-climate-change-SA/2007/05/31/1180205410411.html
Prime Minister John Howard has had to be dragged kicking and screaming to accept climate change and must now catch up with the states, says South Australian Premier Mike Rann.
He called on the prime minister to join the states to create a national carbon trading scheme.
Qld to announce climate change policy
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Qld-to-announce-climate-change-policy/2007/05/31/1180205404609.html
The Queensland government will launch a new climate change policy next week that will lead to major cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, Premier Peter Beattie says.
The state government announced on Wednesday a tax increase on car sales that will raise $200 million a year.
But that money will be channelled into social services rather than being spent directly on the environment.
The tax hike will see Queensland's two per cent motor vehicle transfer duty increase to new rates linked to a car's number of cylinders.
Cut CO2 or Australia will burn: experts
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Cut-CO2-or-Australia-will-burn-experts/2007/05/31/1180205415009.html
Unless action is taken now to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, Australia will be unable to manage future catastrophic bushfires, leading climate scientists have warned.
China, India, US 'key to emission issue'
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/China-India-US-key-to-emission-issue/2007/05/31/1180205413010.html
Origin Energy Ltd says the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions problem will not be solved unless China, India and the United States join regional trading schemes or a set of schemes.
Meanwhile on the local front, delegates at the conferences agreed Australian businesses that have invested in carbon technology, were looking for risk protection, which will only come when a price on carbon is set.
"We want a price on carbon," Mr Tureck said.
"We want the impacts to flow through the economy."
Origin believes there should not be "carbon holidays", or grandfathering arrangements for particular industries, whereby free trading permits for big polluters are issued in order to ensure electricity prices do not rise dramatically.
Origin believes some permit allocation should be auctioned to companies rather than given for free and that the income generated should be used to help low income or vulnerable customers who might have trouble paying higher electricity bills.
"It is not a subsidy of the electricity price, it is offsetting the impact on household income," Mr Tureck said.
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