It’s time that the fossil fuel companies whose products are responsible for the climate crisis start footing some of the bill for cleaning it up. A $1 levy per tonne of carbon pollution from the country’s biggest polluters, proposed today by the Australia Institute, is the very least that these companies can do, said Leader of the Australian Greens Dr Richard Di Natale.
“Fossil fuels like coal are the biggest cause of climate change, and yet despite raking in billions of dollars in super profits each year, the companies that dig up and sell them aren’t paying enough towards cleaning up the mess their products help to cause. That needs to stop” said Di Natale.
”Houses in Australia are on fire today. Hundreds of thousands of hectares of bush land is on fire today. Temperature records are being broken across the country today. It’s not too much to ask that fossil fuel companies contribute some of the money we will need to clean up the mess.”
“Coal will kill us. The producers of disaster inducing coal, oil and gas cannot get off scot free while their product contributes to deadly fires and oppressive heatwaves,” said Greens Climate Change spokesperson Adam Bandt, MP.
“The costs of these climate induced extreme weather events are skyrocketing. If this government was serious about protecting the Australian economy and saving Australian lives, they’d introduce a pollution levy to properly equip our emergency services and prepare our cities and towns.
“The Liberals just sabotaged global climate talks for the sake of dodgy credits they now say they don’t need. The government has been shamed by the rest of the world and is now trying to crabwalk out of its unlawful carryover credit debacle. If the Liberals say they don’t need their dodgy carryover credits then they should rule out using them and apologise to the rest of the world for scuppering the Madrid climate summit.”
Author: admin
Morrison needs to show leadership on climate now more than ever
Australia is in the midst of an unprecedented heatwave and bushfire emergency, but the Prime Minister has been missing in action. Scott Morrison must show some leadership and immediately convene emergency meetings with fire chiefs, peak medical bodies and cross-party political leadership to craft a response to this crisis, said Leader of the Australian Greens Dr Richard Di Natale.
”The country is in crisis and the Australian people are crying out for leadership, but Scott Morrison has been missing in action,” said Di Natale.
”We are seeing the climate crisis play out right now across Australia, and it is only going to get worse. That’s why we need the Prime Minister to lead an emergency response that is above politics, that brings the community together and not only responds to these fires but prepares for the fires that are yet to come.
“The decision today by NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian to declare a State of Emergency in New South Wales highlights just how serious this situation is not just in New South Wales but across the country, and how missing leadership has been at the national level.
“That’s why the Greens are calling on the Prime Minister to immediately :
- Commit to convening an emergency Summit with the Emergency Leaders for Climate Action to discuss improving how we prepare for and resource bushfire emergencies in a changed climate.
- Meet with the Presidents of medical colleges who have called the current crisis a public health emergency to discuss critical responses to protect human health.
- Take a page out of John Howard‘s response to the Port Arthur tragedy, convene an urgent cross party forum with the leaders of our main political parties to find a way forward on our paralysed and wholly insufficient climate policy.
PREMIER DECLARES STATE OF EMERGENCY
The NSW Government has declared a State of Emergency from this morning, lasting for a period of seven days, ahead of worsening fire conditions predicted for this week.
Premier Gladys Berejiklian has accepted the advice of Rural Fire Service Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons to declare a State of Emergency under Section 33 of the State of Emergency and Rescue Management Act.
The declaration enables the RFS Commissioner to exercise extraordinary powers to protect life and property.
“Declaring this State of Emergency is vital to the safety of communities in NSW as we face the most devastating bushfire season in living memory having lost six lives and almost 800 homes destroyed,” Ms Berejiklian said.
“These declarations are not taken lightly. This is the second State of Emergency this season following the declaration made on 11 November, also for a period of seven days.”
“It will ensure once again that our State is best placed to respond to the predicted fire conditions.”
A State of Emergency declaration enables extraordinary powers to be exercised by the RFS Commissioner. These include the power to:
- Direct any Government agency to conduct or refrain from conducting its functions;
- Control and coordinate the allocation of Government resources;
- Evacuate people from property within the declared area;
- Close roads and thoroughfares to traffic;
- Pull down or shore up infrastructure at risk of collapse;
- Order the shutdown of essential utilities in the declared area including electricity, gas, oil, water; and
- Enter or take possession of property in the course of the emergency response.
Minister for Police and Emergency Services David Elliott said the efforts of our hard working firefighters are to be commended as they face these challenging conditions after many have been fighting fires for months.
“The entire State has a huge level of gratitude for the thousands of firefighters on the frontline who have risked their own safety to protect life and property,” Mr Elliott said.
“The work they are so committed to right now will never be forgotten.”
Police charge two men for break and enter offences at Scone
Police attached to the Hunter Valley Police District have arrested two men following an investigation into multiple break and enters in the Scone area.
About 5.15am (Wednesday 18 December 2019) police attended a business in Kelly Street following reports of an alarm sounding.
Police noticed a man nearby and he was searched and arrested after police allegedly located items in his backpack.
The man, aged 58, was taken to Scone Police Station and charged with a 15 break and enters, which allegedly occurred at various businesses and houses in the Scone area during the past two months.
He was refused bail and will appear in Muswellbrook Local Court tomorrow (Thursday 19 December 2019).
A second man, aged 34, was also arrested today in Bingle Street, Scone, following investigations into a break and enter at a unit in Birrell Street, Scone.
Police will allege the man forced entry to the residence and damage property inside.
He was taken to Muswellbrook Police Station where he was charged with break and enter (with intent) and malicious damage.
He was also refused bail and will appear in the same court tomorrow.
The men are not known to each other.
Blind & vision-impaired Australians celebrate audio description on public broadcasters
Our blind and vision-impaired communities are celebrating today, after years of campaigning alongside the Greens, that audio description will be made available on Australia’s public broadcasters: the ABC and SBS.
Australian Greens Disability Rights spokesperson Senator Jordon Steele-John said there are more than 450,000 blind or vision-impaired Australians who are currently unable to enjoy television with friends and family, or reap the medium’s educational potential.
“This is now finally beginning to change, with funding made available to our public broadcasters to implement audio description across their channels from 1 July 2020,” Steele-John said today.
“Whilst this is a huge win for our blind and vision-impaired communities, it is disappointing to see that this government has not committed to requiring commercial free-to-air television stations to provide audio description as well.
“The commercial stations – Channel’s Seven, Nine, Ten and Sky – are now on notice. The technology is readily available and cheap, and the community expects them to follow suit and make sure their content is accessible to blind and visually-impaired Australians!
“The Greens will continue to campaign alongside the community to make sure that free-to-air TV in Australia is accessible and inclusive for everyone.”
Murray-Darling the real victim of environmental vandalism at Water Ministers meeting
Today’s meeting of the Murray–Darling Basin Ministerial Council has left the River system in crisis, robbed the environment, and has left South Australia high and dry.
“Today’s meeting has delivered a major blow to the environment, with cuts to crucial environmental water and a delay in plans designed to restore the health of the River” said Senator for SA and Greens Spokesperson for the Murray-Darling, Senator Sarah Hanson-Young.
“Rather than tackling over-allocation and mismanagement of water, Water Ministers today cut water to the environment. This means less water for the River to survive, while big irrigators can keep damming, pumping and making profits.
“The only winners out of the today’s meeting are the big irrigators upstream who have continued to expand irrigation, despite the drought.
“What we’ve seen today is a concerted, planned effort from the upstream states to cut obligations to the environment and roll South Australia.
“NSW’s refusal to help return the promised 450gl to the River as required in the Plan throws South Australia under the bridge.
“When the Murray-Darling Plan was agreed to, all signatories — that is, all the States — agreed to return 3,200 gigalitres of water to the River, that commitment is now effectively dead.
“The SA Water Minister should hang his head in shame. How did he let this happen?
“SA Premier Steven Marshall needs to front up to South Australians and explain what he’s going to do with his capitulating, weak Minister who has sold out our state and surrendered the Rivers health.”
Morrison government missing-in-action while climate emergency plunges profits of Australian farms
Greens Senator Janet Rice has slammed the government’s failure to act as farmers suffer the effects of the climate emergency, following a damning report released today from the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences.
The report found that the climate crisis has sunk Australian farms’ average annual profits by 22% and that crop farmers have been hit the hardest, losing $1.1bn in revenue a year since 2000.
Senator Janet Rice, Greens spokesperson for Agriculture and Regional affairs said
“This is the cost of our climate crisis. It’s unacceptable that Australian farmers are losing around $18,600 per farm and yet the government is still failing to act on the climate emergency that’s causing this loss.
“Farmers and rural Australians are on the frontline of the climate crisis and this drought is devastating families and leaving communities to perish.
“Instead of helping regional communities and farmers, the coal-hugging Liberal-National Coalition have lifted pollution and done everything in their power to make global heating worse.
“The LNP seem more interested in cosying up to their coal, oil and gas lobby mates than they are in supporting farmers.
“The Bureau of Meteorology predicts that drier than average weather will continue, so we must ensure farmers have what they need to adapt.
“The Morrison government can’t just throw money at the problem as a bandaid during times of crisis. This is an ongoing crisis, made worse by the government’s failure to address the root cause of drought, fund long-term drought resilience programs, and take urgent climate action.
“It is only by cutting pollution that we can reduce the impact of droughts and alleviate the effect on farmers.”
ANNOUNCEMENTS, SPIN, FUDGED FIGURES BUT NO PLAN ON TASMANIA’S TRAFFIC WOES
The Prime Minister should stop fudging the figures and get on fixing southern Tasmania’s traffic woes, starting with delivering on the Airport Roundabout.
In 2017, the Liberals promised the Airport Roundabout in Hobart would be finished next year.
Instead, Tasmanians stuck in airport traffic will be still waiting months before they see the first shovel in the ground.
Worse still, there is confusion about total funding for the Hobart-Sorell Corridor.
There was $154 million promised for both the Hobart-Sorell Corridor and the Hobart Airport Roundabout but with blowouts to the Airport Roundabout there is now just $86m available for the rest of the Hobart-Sorell corridor.
We also know from MYEFO that just $25.2 million of the Infrastructure Fast Track will flow to Tasmania this year – less than 15 percent of the Tasmanian package.
Tasmanian locals as well as visitors deserve a plan on infrastructure and jobs from Scott Morrison.
They deserve an answer on whether the Liberal Government will properly fund the over-run over the airport roundabout, and what that means for upgrades to the whole corridor.
In addition – when will all this actually happen?
This Government, now in its seventh year, is continuing to demonstrate it has no plan to boost jobs and no plan on the economy.
LIBERALS FAILING TO DEAL WITH TASSIE SKILLS CRISIS
Official data shows 1190 fewer Tasmanians are engaged in apprenticeships or traineeships than when the Federal Coalition took office more than six years ago.
That’s a drop of 12.5 per cent.
Over the same period, the Government has issued more than 500,000 visas to overseas workers to cover the skills shortages created by its cuts to TAFE and training.
Tasmanian employers are crying out for qualified workers.
The skills crisis in engineering, health, trades, technicians and construction is hurting the Tasmanian economy and denying young people a pathway to secure, well-paid jobs.
Nationwide, since the Liberals were elected six years ago, Australia has lost around 150,000 apprenticeships and traineeships.
Scott Morrison has no plan to fix the skills crisis he created.
He has no plan to create more jobs or to lift wages for those who are employed.
Australia is perfectly placed to reap the benefits offered by the extraordinary economic growth in our region.
But to take full advantage of this growth we must train Australians so they have the skills and qualifications to exploit the looming opportunities in manufacturing and construction.
Plans for Newcastle Beach progress with feedback from the community
City of Newcastle has reconvened its Bathers Way – King Edward Park to Newcastle Beach community reference group (CRG) as it moves towards the next step in completing an 11-kilometre revitalisation of its coastline.
The CRG met last week to recap on the project to date, including the results of the 2018 engagement and design changes, and to give feedback on the latest plans.
Bathers Way indictitive design
Lord Mayor Nuatali Nelmes said the CRG was an important community advisory group that provided valuable feedback as plans are finalised.
“The Bathers Way Community Reference Group provides broad representation of groups including boardriders, residents and Indigenous stakeholders, giving us important input into the delivery of this project.
“At last week’s meeting the group provided positive feedback on the latest designs for the South Newcastle Beach upgrades, particularly the incorporation of the heritage stone arches of the former picnic pavilion.
“The project team also collected feedback on planned public amenity improvements to King Edward Park, including viewing platforms looking over the coast, and upgrades to activate and open Newcastle Beach.
“Consultation for this work stretches back a decade to when engagement first commenced on the Coastal Revitalisation Strategy Masterplan in 2009, and we’ve consistently been gathering and implementing feedback since.
“The Bathers Way project has seen Nobbys, Dixon Park, Bar Beach and Merewether transformed over the past decade and we’re looking forward to starting work on stage 1 of Newcastle next year after consultation and detailed design works,” the Lord Mayor said.
The remaining section of the Bathers Way – Newcastle Beach project is divided into two stages, and in late 2018 the City conducted drop-in sessions and an associated survey to present updated design plans and seek community feedback on the draft plans.
The plans for Newcastle Beach project covers from King Edward Park to Newcastle Surf Life Saving Club. Stage 1 includes a new skate park and bowl, exercise equipment, access improvements, new amenities, and a kiosk. Stage 2 includes a community hub in the redevelopment of the Newcastle beach pavilion in a future project.
The engagement results from late 2018 included 335 participants and showed most were broadly supportive of the project but had concerns about the intrusion of the skate bowl onto the beach.
The City developed new concept plans incorporating the skate bowl into the existing footprint of the South Newcastle Beach skatepark, releasing the designs in July along with a month-long ‘Have Your Say’ period, showing overwhelmingly positive feedback.
This design is under review by City of Newcastle officers and will be revised subject to the finalisation of the coastal engineering assessment.
People can view the new Bathers Way designs HERE.