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Is The Paris Pledge A Red Line For Australia (Read 1038 times)
whiteknight
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Is The Paris Pledge A Red Line For Australia
Sep 1st, 2018 at 12:08pm
 
'Is this a red line for us?' $15b European trade deal doomed if Australia dodges Paris pledge

31 August 2018
Brisbane Times


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.   Sad   

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.   Sad

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.


Energy Minister Angus Taylor says he is not "skeptical about climate science ... but I am and have been for many years deeply skeptical of the economics of so many of the emissions reduction programs dreamed up by politicians.

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”.   Sad

“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.”

Australia’s ambassador to the EU, Justin Brown, hosed down suggestions the Morrison government would exit the Paris deal.

“Australia is a country that stands by its international commitments. We’ve made commitments in the Paris agreement context. We are committed to those as we are committed to global action to address this global challenge,” he said at the meeting.

Committee chair Bernd Lange pointed to a resolution adopted by the European Parliament in July to never conclude a trade agreement "without a reference to the Paris climate agreement and the implementation [of emissions reduction].”

The EU bloc is Australia's second largest trading partner, third largest export destination and second largest services market. The EU was also Australia's largest source of foreign investment in 2017.

The government says a free trade deal would benefit Australian consumers and businesses through better access to goods and services at lower prices, while enabling Australian producers to tap a market of half a billion people and a GDP of US$17.3 trillion.

Mr Morrison - who is in Jakarta for trade talks - and Trade Minister Simon Birmingham declined to comment on the European Parliament's position.   Sad

Environment Minister Melissa Price said Australia "stands by the international commitments it makes" and has a strong track record of meeting emissions reduction targets.

"Australia is on track to beat our 2020 Kyoto target by 294 million tonnes and we are confident Australia will also meet its 2030 target," she said.

The Paris climate accord is deeply unpopular with conservative MPs, including Nationals MPs whose electorates would benefit from an EU trade deal. Keith Pitt resigned as an assistant minister last week in protest at the Paris treaty.

"I will always put reducing power prices before Paris," he said.

A 2017 report by the United Nations environment program that found Australia’s emissions were set to far exceed its Paris pledge and government data released in January showed Australia's annual emissions had risen for the fourth year running.

Labor’s climate change and energy spokesman Mark Butler said the government had no emissions reduction plan and would fail to meet its Paris goal.   Sad

“The Prime Minister might think he can get away with [failing to cut emissions] domestically, but it is clear it will not be accepted by our international trading partners.
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lee
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Re: Is The Paris Pledge A Red Line For Australia
Reply #1 - Sep 1st, 2018 at 12:59pm
 
whiteknight wrote on Sep 1st, 2018 at 12:08pm:
"“I believe as the largest trading block in the world we have a responsibility to go beyond pure profits.”


"The EU bloc is Australia's second largest trading partner, third largest export destination and second largest services market. The EU was also Australia's largest source of foreign investment in 2017."



So we will blackmail Australia until they agree. We do of course really, really mean that we will go "beyond pure profits". Grin Grin Grin

Meanwhile, in Germany, Angela is backing away from EU plans to go greener because other EU nations are not doing their bit already. Amid their own emissions rise -

"Germany announces carbon emission rise for second year in a row "

http://www.climatechangenews.com/2018/01/24/germany-announces-carbon-emission-ri...

Of course Germany is not alone in that.

"EU carbon emissions rose in 2017: Eurostat"

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-eu-carbon-climatechange/eu-carbon-emissions-r...
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issuevoter
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Re: Is The Paris Pledge A Red Line For Australia
Reply #2 - Sep 1st, 2018 at 8:25pm
 
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions is of the highest priority, but the veiled threats from the EU have little in the way of substance. Its more about posturing in the European parliament. As for Abbott and his GW denialists. They are going to end up like the fossils in their coal.
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No political allegiance. No philosophy. No religion.
 
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lee
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Re: Is The Paris Pledge A Red Line For Australia
Reply #3 - Sep 1st, 2018 at 8:32pm
 
issuevoter wrote on Sep 1st, 2018 at 8:25pm:
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions is of the highest priority, but the veiled threats from the EU have little in the way of substance.



If "reducing  greenhouse gas emissions " is of the highest priority why is China getting a free pass until at least 2030?
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cods
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Re: Is The Paris Pledge A Red Line For Australia
Reply #4 - Sep 2nd, 2018 at 8:13am
 
I have to say I find the PANIC MERCHANTS   will always play on FEAR to win their argument.....Islands disappearing overnight  cities becoming deserts....even sand on top of mountains instead of snow.... I think I have read it all.....Australia is surrounded by the WORST emitters of greenhouse gasses.......we have the  smallest  population..and the slowest growing population....

yet we are hounded  time and time again.....to do more and more.....

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Bobby.
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Re: Is The Paris Pledge A Red Line For Australia
Reply #5 - Sep 2nd, 2018 at 8:33am
 
lee wrote on Sep 1st, 2018 at 8:32pm:
issuevoter wrote on Sep 1st, 2018 at 8:25pm:
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions is of the highest priority, but the veiled threats from the EU have little in the way of substance.



If "reducing  greenhouse gas emissions " is of the highest priority why is China getting a free pass until at least 2030?



Good question -
China is a place where you can hardly breathe from all the toxic smoke in the air yet they get off Scott free.
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Ajax
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Re: Is The Paris Pledge A Red Line For Australia
Reply #6 - Sep 2nd, 2018 at 12:09pm
 
Anyone who supports the Anthropogenic Global Warming Church is just a dickhead plain and simple.

...
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1. There has never been a more serious assault on our standard of living than Anthropogenic Global Warming..Ajax
2. "One hour of freedom is worth more than 40 years of slavery &  prison" Regas Feraeos
 
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miketrees
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Re: Is The Paris Pledge A Red Line For Australia
Reply #7 - Sep 2nd, 2018 at 12:49pm
 


You Drongoes need to wake up.

Nothing is going to stop countries burning more fossil fuels,,,,,unless we have some serious technological breakthroughs that are economically viable.

Our best bet is to prepare for a warmer climate, cut population to a manageable level.
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juliar
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Re: Is The Paris Pledge A Red Line For Australia
Reply #8 - Sep 17th, 2018 at 10:25am
 
ScoMo has it all in hand and will simply do what China and India do - just ignore the Paris FRAUD but give it lip service.
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