Communications Minister must urgently intervene to put safety first

Under the urgent carrier licence condition, the Communications Minister has the power to appoint an independent technical expert to oversee Optus’ Triple 0 capability. This only requires cabinet sign off, not parliamentary, which means that it could be done today.

Greens Communications spokesperson, Senator Sarah Hanson-Young:

“This is a catastrophic failure of Optus, and a devastating regulatory failure too.

“Optus have put profits before safety and our telecommunications regulations have failed to protect the community.

“We need better regulation and better oversight and that’s why I am calling on the Communications Minster today to immediately put in place independent oversight of Optus.

“The Communications Minister has the power to intervene and put in place an independent technical expert to oversee Optus’ delivery of Triple 0. Given how little public faith there is in Optus now, the Minister should take this issue to Cabinet for sign off immediately.

“How many more strikes does Optus need? The company clearly can’t be trusted to do the right thing on its own. We don’t need another review for the Minister to take immediate action, she has the power to act and can intervene today.

“This is a matter of life and death and at the end of the day, responsibility sits with the Government to ensure that this most essential service is delivered to Australians.

“People need to know that when they dial Triple 0 they will get an answer. This is an industry that is largely self-regulated and it’s time that ended. We need direct regulation of these essential serv

International visit

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will depart on Saturday 20 September to travel to the United States, United Kingdom and United Arab Emirates.

In the United States, the Prime Minister will lead Australia’s delegation at the United Nations General Assembly for High Level Week. He will have a range of bilateral meetings with some of our major international partners.

This visit will allow Australia to continue working with our international partners to address the growing economic and security challenges facing the world today and to take forward outcomes that benefit Australian people at home in their everyday lives.

During High Level Week, the Prime Minister will promote investment in Australia, particularly in renewable energy and manufacturing, share Australia’s world-leading experience in protecting children online, and highlight our practical action on climate change.

The Prime Minister will attend a major conference on the two state solution hosted by France and Saudi Arabia. Australia is a longstanding supporter of a two-state solution as the only pathway to a secure and prosperous future for Israelis and Palestinians alike.

Prime Minister Albanese will then travel to London and meet with United Kingdom Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and hold a series of other high level meetings. The United Kingdom is Australia’s second-largest source of foreign investment and our second-largest destination for outgoing investment.

The UK is also our 11th largest two-way trading partner – with $31 billion in goods and services trade in 2022-23 – as well as our 12th largest export destination and our 9th largest source of imports.

On the return to Australia, Prime Minister Albanese will stop in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and meet President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan to discuss Australia’s critical Free Trade Agreement with the UAE, the Australia-UAE Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA), coming into force.

Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles will be Acting Prime Minister while Prime Minister Albanese is overseas.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese:

“This visit is focussed on taking forward Australian’s national and economic interests at home.

“I will be promoting investment in Australia in line with our Future Made in Australia agenda, highlighting world leading steps Australia is taking to keep children safe online and delivering Australia’s new climate target to the United Nations in line with our Paris Agreement obligations.

“This will be an opportunity to meet with some of Australia’s major international partners to discuss trade and economic opportunities that help to create jobs and growth at home.

“During the visit I will address the United National General Assembly for the first time as Prime Minister as part of High Level week.

“Australia played a pivotal role in the founding of the United Nations – because we have always understood how important it is for middle powers as well as smaller nations to have their voices heard in the big challenges facing our world.

“Australia’s commitment to the United Nations and the multilateral system is enduring – our sovereignty and prosperity are strengthened through global institutions and rules.”

Pine Gap Spy Base On Trial In Alice Springs Court

Pine Gap’s involvement in assisting the Genocide of Palestinians in Gaza will be heard

in the Alice Springs Local Court on Tuesday the 23 rd and 24 th September, as two

defendants contest charges for blockading the joint Australian – US military spy base in

Pine Gap Military Spy base, on the outskirts of Alice Springs, provides crucial

surveillance to the Israel Occupation Forces, aiding in the targeting of civilians and

infrastructure in Gaza. Pine Gap’s surveillance operations in Palestine implicates

Australia in assisting in war crimes and genocide.

This court case coincides with last week’s United Nations report, concluding that Israeli

authorities “Intended to kill as many Palestinians as possible” and have committed, and

continue to commit, the crime against humanity of extermination.

Members of Mparntwe for Falastin will be speaking to media outside the local court to

highlight the connections between Pine Gap and the ongoing genocide in Gaza.

Planning reform receives strong support

The Minns Labor Government’s landmark Planning System Reforms Bill 2025 has received strong backing from industry, local government and stakeholders following its introduction to Parliament yesterday.

The changes proposed in this Bill will modernise the nearly 50 year old Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979, cutting red tape and delays that have been holding back housing and infrastructure delivery across New South Wales.

Stakeholders from across the housing and planning sector have welcomed the reforms as a commonsense and long-overdue reset of the planning system to help get more homes built, faster.

CEO of Urban Development Industry Association Stuart Ayres said:

“This is the planning reform that NSW needs to help industry build the homes people need. I am confident these reforms will see more homes built faster.”

Sydney YIMBY said:

“We think it’s great that the Minns Government is putting this forward, and that the Opposition leader Mark Speakman has said that they’re “pro-housing, pro-reform”. We encourage them to back this change in and set up a planning system that will provide for our children and grandchildren in decades to come.”

Committee for Sydney said:

“We’re on the verge of the biggest reform the planning system has seen in decades. The planning system we have has created headaches for communities, councils and developers alike. Too often, good projects for housing, infrastructure and development are caught in a maze that can run through as many as 22 agencies.”

Chair of the Housing Now! Alliance and Executive Director of Business Western Sydney David Borger said:

“This is the kind of system reset we’ve been calling for.”

CEO of Urban Taskforce Australia Tom Forrest said:

“Making housing a central Object of the EP&Act represents a seismic shift in how NSW approaches planning and housing supply.”

NSW President of the Planning Institute of Australia Sue Weatherley said:

“Planners support a risk-based approach to development assessment – where low-risk, straightforward development can proceed through streamlined pathways – freeing up resources for more complex or higher-risk proposals.”

Property Council NSW Executive Director Katie Stevenson said:

“It represents a major step forward in modernising the NSW planning system – the reforms will help to clear the backlog of smaller, simpler projects and free up important resources to get on with the more complex projects that drive jobs, housing and economic growth.”

Master Builders Incoming NSW Executive Director Matthew Pollock:

“The Government deserves credit for taking on a system where unconstrained rules and regulations, unnecessary inconsistencies and duplication is holding builders back from getting on with tackling the housing crisis.”

The Green Building Council said:

“The bill represents the most significant overhaul of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act in almost 50 years.”

Mayor of the Inner West Council Darcy Byrne said:

“Simplifying and modernising our State’s planning legislation is the single most important thing that must be done if we are to stop the exodus of young people from our city.”

Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Paul Scully said:

“The reaction to this bill demonstrates there is consensus that reform is essential.

“The broad support we’ve seen shows these reforms are the right step to deliver more homes, faster, and give young people and families a fair shot at living where they want.

“I am encouraged by the supporting statements that the Opposition have made. I would say to everyone let’s not delay these reforms and play politics with them. Let’s get on with it.”

Australia welcomes Tongan Royal Family

The Australian Government welcomes the historic visit to Australia from 18 to 24 September of His Majesty King Tupou VI and Queen Nanasipau’u of Tonga as we strengthen our partnership and shape a peaceful, stable and prosperous Pacific.

Today, His Majesty and Australia’s Governor-General, Her Excellency Sam Mostyn AC, alongside Tongan Deputy Prime Minister Dr Taniela Fusimālohi and Australia’s Attorney-General the Hon Michelle Rowland MP, witnessed the signing of a statement of intent that commits Australia and Tonga to elevating our bilateral partnership with a comprehensive and enduring agreement known as Kaume’a Ofi.

Kaume’a Ofi means ‘close friends’ and signifies warmth, trust, mutual respect, dependability and shared values.

Australia and Tonga will also sign a Memorandum of Understanding on Cyber Cooperation to support the two countries to protect national security, manage cyber threats and harness emerging technologies.

Their Majesties’ visit to Australia demonstrates the importance of our bilateral relationship and depth of the cultural and personal connections between our two countries spanning 200 years.

The visit will celebrate our strong defence ties, scientific innovation in heath and rich connections across faith.

Tongan diaspora will travel from around the country to attend a church service in Sydney, led by Reverend Charissa Suli, a daughter of Tongan immigrants who became President of the Uniting Church in Australia last year.

His Majesty will recognise Tongan Australians who helped in the 2022 Hunga-Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano disaster with Royal Order of the Crown of Tonga and Coronation Medals.

Her Majesty will also lend her support to Australian researchers in the fight against cervical cancer.

Massive hole in modelling – Labor’s low ambition target excludes costs of more fires, floods and heatwaves

Massive hole in modelling – Labor’s low ambition target excludes costs of more fires, floods and heatwaves  

While Minister Bowen has said today that a target over 70 percent carries ‘unacceptable environmental, social and economic costs for our country’, the very modelling he is relying on to inform his targets does not factor in the costs of climate impacts from the Government’s own National Climate Risk Assessment.

That Risk Assessment found the following was likely at just 2C of warming:

  • 1.5 million Australians at risk of sea level rise making their homes and communities unliveable¹
  • Rolling disastrous weather events
  • Heat deaths surging by over 200% in cities like Sydney and Darwin²
  • Hospitals pushed to the brink
  • Hundreds of billions wiped from the property market over the next 25 years³
  • Higher insurance bills, failing crops and higher grocery prices
  • Mass extinction

¹Climate Risk Assessment Overview page 22

²Climate Risk Assessment Overview page 35 – figure 4

³Climate Risk Assessment Overview page 31

On pg. 14 of the CSIRO modelling, commissioned by the CCA, that the Government is relying on to dismiss further ambition lies a critical caveat:

“However, it should be noted that this analysis does not account for the benefits of avoided climate change impacts in either scenario.”

It is unclear how the Government can stand by this modelling which fails to include the costs of 1.5, 2 or even more degrees of warming.

The modelling can be found online here: 

Modelling Sectoral Technology and Emissions Pathways to 2035 and Net Zero Emissions – Final Report PDF (11 MB)

Greens Leader Senator Larissa Waters:

“The more we look at the modelling behind this utter failure of a climate target, the more it shows it was crafted to appease the coal and gas industry.

“The government’s modelling fails to ask the question: what will be the cost of 1.5 million people losing their homes to sea level rises? What will be the cost of hospitals unable to see patients due to cascading catastrophic weather events? What will be the cost of crop failures on the price and availability of food? 

“How can the government wave around modelling that doesn’t address the cost of climate breakdown, when their own advice says this is what’s coming?

“The climate target is an utter failure which doesn’t account for the cost of climate change because it was written to appease the coal and gas industry.

“What a farce – the minister’s laughable claim this morning that a target over 70% would carry ‘unacceptable environmental, social and economic costs’ is because his model deliberately ignored the cost of climate damage.

“Labor is using selective modelling to justify their pre-determined low climate target all because they want to keep their coal and gas donors happy. 

“Labor’s cynical attempt to mislead the public on the ambition of their climate targets takes the public for fools. 

“Low ambition to appease the coal and gas corporations means ignoring the costs of more fires, more floods, more heatwaves and more extinctions.

“A truly ambitious target would be based on science and based on the avoided cost of disasters – and would entail ending coal and gas exports that are putting us all at risk.

“Labor are too captured by the political donations from coal and gas corporations that they have prioritised polluters’ profits ahead of a safe climate future for everyday Australians and nature.”

“We have existing, affordable technologies that ClimateWorks says could deliver over 85% emissions reduction and, with the Greens, Labor has the numbers in parliament to be truly ambitious on climate.”

Greens to introduce cat containment laws in NSW

New laws will be proposed by the Greens in the NSW Parliament in October that would make people responsible for keeping their cat safely at home and give Councils the discretion to regulate and enforce cat containment measures in priority areas. The proposed law will be introduced after WA joined the rest of Australia in acting to keep cats from killing native animals. NSW is the only state in Australia that has not acted to protect the hundreds of millions of native animals that are killed by wandering cats every year, with 65% of the community wanting action to contain cats.

Greens MP and spokesperson for the environment Sue Higginson said:

“The failure of the NSW Government to act on cat containment is a tragedy for the environment, and is now a national embarrassment. We are now the only state that hasn’t addressed the extinction of native animals as a result of wandering pet cats,”

“Protecting our precious and threatened native species is the primary driver for us taking this step, but the truth is that irresponsible cat owners that allow their animals to roam free and unsupervised are not taking care of the animals that they have a responsibility to care for,”

“Our plan is twofold and acts to protect animals and empower Councils to work for their community. We intend to create a responsibility for cat owners, to ensure that the cat is kept on the same premises where it is cared for with food, water and shelter. We also want to see Councils given the authority to make decisions about priority areas in their communities where people can be required to take action to prevent cats from wandering,”

“This approach recognises that native animals and the cats that prey on them should be kept safe from one another, as well as giving enforcement powers to Councils that can be scaled up and down as necessary to prevent cats from wandering into neighbours’ yards, nature reserves or anywhere else where there is a problem,”

“The Minns Labor Government has intentionally avoided this politically tricky problem, and have prevented evidence based recommendations from being included in Parliamentary reports. Our message to them is, if you won’t take this step – we will,”

“These laws could be passed as early as October this year, as long as the Government and Opposition stand up for the 65% of the community who are crying out for this type of reform. Our proposal does not immediately create massive obligations for NSW or Councils, but it will finally give Councils the tools to do their job,” Ms Higginson said.

Outline of Draft Law

The proposed legislation seeks to:

Amend the Local Government Act 1993 to allow Councils to make orders on defined areas within the Local Government Area that would require an owner or occupier to take action as necessary to prevent a cat from escaping from premises on which the cat is kept.

Failure to comply with this order would be an offence with a maximum penalty of 8 penalty units or $880.

Amend the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act 1979 to require that a person in charge of any animal, including cats, must not without lawful authority intentionally release an animal from the premises where it is kept unless the animal is accompanied by the person.

This would be in addition to the requirement for a person in charge of an animal to ensure the animal is provided with food, water, and shelter.

A breach of this section would be an offence with a maximum penalty of 8 penalty units or $880.

Setting Australia’s 2035 climate change target

Today, we’re announcing Australia’s next step in acting on climate change and seizing the economic opportunity before our nation.

The Albanese Labor Government has accepted the Climate Change Authority’s independent advice and will set our 2035 climate change target at a range of 62% to 70% reduction on 2005 emissions.

This is an ambitious but achievable target – sending the right investment signal, responding to the science and delivered with a practical plan. It builds on what we know are the lowest cost actions we can deliver over the next decade while leaving room for new technologies to take things up a gear.

According to the best available analysis the majority of the reductions for Australia to reach the initial stages of our 2035 climate change target range can be achieved through actions in five priority areas, building on our existing policies. These are:

  • Clean electricity across the economy: more renewable electricity generation, supported by new transmission and storage (including household batteries)
  • Lowering emissions by electrification and efficiency: our New Vehicle Efficiency Standard, supporting consumers switch to EVs and improving energy efficiency
  • Expanding clean fuel use: establishing a low carbon liquid fuels industry and supporting green hydrogen
  • Accelerating new technologies: through Future Made in Australia investments, and innovation support through ARENA
  • Net carbon removals scaled up: enabling land holders to earn money for eligible carbon storage and a robust ACCU scheme

In addition to help meet the target, the Albanese Labor Government is today announcing we will deliver:

  • A new $5 billion Net Zero Fund in the National Reconstruction Fund, to help industrial facilities decarbonise and scale up more renewables and low emissions manufacturing
  • $2 billion for the Clean Energy Finance Corporation to continue to drive downwards pressure on electricity prices
  • $1.1 billion to encourage more production of Clean Fuels here in Australia
  • $40 million to accelerate the roll out of kerbside and fast EV charging across our suburbs and regions
  • $85 million for frameworks and tools to help households and businesses understand and improve their energy performance
  • $50 million for sports clubs doing their bit to decarbonise and drive climate action

The global shift to clean energy represents one of the biggest economic transformations since the Industrial Revolution – and it presents Australia with an enormous economic and jobs opportunity.

Today the following documents to support the Australian Government’s 2035 climate target are available.

  • The Net Zero Plan and six supporting sector plans: The Net Zero Plan outlines how the Australian Government will meet Australia’s net zero target. The sector plans outline the opportunities and challenges across the economy as we decarbonise towards 2050, the key policy levers the Government is using and where future emissions reduction potential is seen.
  • The Treasury’s economic modelling: This modelling assesses the economic opportunities from the global net zero transformation for Australia and shows an orderly path to net zero supports more jobs and investment, higher wages and living standards, and a bigger economy. The Treasury modelled two orderly net zero scenarios consistent with our government’s approach and 2035 targets and a Disorderly Transition Scenario.
  • The Climate Change Authority’s advice: This advice, informed by CSIRO modelling, considers the climate science, economic and national interest in advising the Government on Australia’s 2035 target, as well as examining emerging technology and future opportunities on the road to 2050.
  • Our Nationally Determined Contribution: This reflects our international obligation and signals to the world Australia is ready for investment. This document will be submitted as Australia’s Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC), consistent with our obligations under the Paris Agreement.

Australia is not alone in acting on climate change – with around 80% of global GDP covered by national net zero commitments.

Global investment in clean energy projects is set to rise over USD $2 trillion – we want to grow this, and Australia’s share in it.

This is the right target to protect our environment and secure our prosperity and to create jobs and economic growth for our nation.

The Government’s sensible, practical approach means our exporters, farmers and key industries will be able to compete and succeed in the world and our environment will be safe for future generations.

Vitally, this target range balances what the Commonwealth can achieve with existing policies and technologies, and what the country could achieve with a whole-of-economy and whole-of-society effort. A range enables greater ambition, recognising how quickly technology can change and the potential for even greater emissions reduction in the next decade.

We know every effort to tackle emissions today will help avoid the worst impacts of climate change in the future.

This range will see Australia halve its emissions compared to current levels. It is in line with global efforts to limit dangerous global warming.

We are not the biggest polluter or the biggest economy but our commitment to action on climate change matters. It matters to our neighbours, it matters for our economy and it matters for the country that we pass on to our children.

Labor’s 2035 Target: Higher Costs, Zero Credibility

The Coalition strongly rejects Labor’s economy-wrecking 2035 emissions reduction target, a fantasy that rests on flawed assumptions and cannot be believed.

It cannot be believed because it assumes the government achieves its 2030 target, which experts have overwhelmingly said it will not.

Worse still, Labor is withholding the cost of its 2035 plan from the Australian people, and refusing to reveal the economic impact on households, businesses and regional communities. 

We have seen this horror show before. Labor announced its 2030 target, produced glossy modelling, and promised the world. 

In reality, it delivered a trifecta of failure: costs went up, reliability went down, and emissions flatlined.  

Under this disappointing Labor government Australians were promised a $275 cut in their power bill, instead they are up $1,300. 

The government promised emissions reduction but they are stuck at 28 per cent below 2005 levels – exactly where they were when the Coalition left office. 

On these promises, Australia cannot and should not trust this government to deliver on its promises.

Climate change is a global problem, and it demands global action. Australia cannot make a difference on its own, but we must play our part. The Coalition will always support sensible action to reduce emissions.

But interim targets must be grounded in reality, achievable in practice, and protect household budgets, jobs, and industry. Labor’s new target does none of these.

The only guarantee of this announcement is declining living standards and higher costs for households and small businesses, which is what we have seen under this government despite their previous modelling.

In the global fight for capital, Australia needs to attract investment and strengthen our sovereign capability. 

That cannot be done with targets that lack credibility, that don’t outline the cost, and that put our competitiveness at risk.

The Coalition will oppose any attempt to legislate Labor’s 2035 target.

Prime Minister does not have faith in his own plan to bring down power prices

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has no faith in his own promise to bring down power prices.

When asked today when bills will actually fall and by how much, he refused to answer.

Instead of standing by his plan, he dodged, deflected and smeared.

That is not the confidence of a leader who believes in his policy, it is the behaviour of a disappointing Prime Minister who knows his word cannot be trusted.

What Australians do know is power prices have not come down by $275 as promised by Anthony Albanese, instead they’re up $1,300.

Incredibly today Energy Minister Chris Bowen claimed that the Climate Change Authority’s advice, that there would be a 20 per cent reduction in household energy prices within the decade, or $1,000 annually “was not a political commitment.”

He did this because he knows the Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) gave evidence to a senate inquiry last year that it could make no guarantees on lower prices with more renewables.

This is advice the Government is basing its entire emissions policy on yet Minister after Minister have refused to back its claim on power prices.

The truth is Anthony Albanese and Chris Bowen have lied to Australians before and now they have no confidence in their new fantasy.

If they had confidence in their plan they would tell Australians how much it was going to cost and put a dollar figure on what it will do to power bills.

As the Prime Minister jets off overseas once again Australians will be left with the bill and left disappointed in the years ahead.