Time for Minns government to get on with the job of delivering reliable, cheap and clean energy

The NSW Opposition has welcomed today’s announcement by the Minns Labor Government that it is committed to delivering the Coalition’s Electricity Infrastructure Roadmap.

Leader of the Opposition Mark Speakman said that the Government has wasted nearly six months commissioning a review which tells us what we already knew.

“Our Roadmap is the right approach to ensure NSW has a successful transition to reliable, clean and affordable energy,” Mr Speakman said.

“The Government needs to get on with its job of delivering the Roadmap – and it needs to stop looking in the rear-view mirror for excuses.”

“We know the energy industry and market needs certainty to operate as effectively as possible and every day that NSW Labor sat on their Energy Check Up was another day of uncertainty.”

Shadow Minister for Energy and Climate Change James Griffin stressed that keeping the lights on and having affordable energy were paramount.

“What today’s report doesn’t tell us is how much consumers or taxpayers will pay if Eraring’s life is extended. Nor has the Government sufficiently outlined the need to extend Eraring and if so for how long, in light of what AEMO’s 2023 Electricity Statement of Opportunities, released 31 August, told us about reliability in NSW,” Mr Griffin said.

“Any decision to extend the life Eraring comes with consequences and what is needed from the Government now is an open and transparent process between the Government and the owners of Eraring to ensure taxpayers get the best outcome.”

Since the election of the Minns Labor Government, households across NSW have been left to fend for themselves as Labor still can’t explain what support they will be providing, how their state-owned energy corporation will function or when it will begin providing relief.

“After six months Chris Minns has finally realised that reliable, cheap and clean energy should be the focus of his Government, so it’s time the Premier stops trying to score cheap political points. NSW led the nation and we can continue to do so if the Government gets on with the job,” Mr Griffin concluded. 

The Opposition will consider the NSW Electricity Supply and Reliability Check Up and its recommendations in detail.

INVESTED IN SOUTHEAST ASIA

The Australian Government has today launched Invested: Australia’s Southeast Asia Economic Strategy to 2040 to deepen Australia’s economic engagement with our region and ensure our shared future prosperity.

The strategy, developed by Mr Nicholas Moore AO, Special Envoy for Southeast Asia, was announced by the Prime Minister at the ASEAN Indo-Pacific Forum in Jakarta today.

It sets out a practical pathway to increase Australia’s two-way trade and investment with the region.

Southeast Asia is a centre of global activity and business, and one of the fastest-growing regions in the world. The strategy outlines how Australia can seize the vast opportunities our diverse and vibrant region presents. It also describes what Australia can offer our region, as a trusted and reliable partner.

The Special Envoy identified 10 priority sectors offering the most potential for growth: agriculture and food; resources; green energy transition; infrastructure; education and skills; visitor economy; healthcare; digital economy, professional and financial services; and creative industries.
The Prime Minister has committed to immediately support three initiatives that go to the heart of the strategy and are an investment in Australia’s economic future:

  • Investment Deal Teams ($70.2 million over four years) who will be based in the ASEAN region and will work with Australian investors, Southeast Asian businesses and governments to identify and facilitate investment opportunities.
  • Southeast Asia Business Exchange ($19.2 million over four years) to boost two-way trade and support Australian exporters to enter, compete and grow in the fast-growing markets of Southeast Asia. This will include a trade and investment campaign to promote opportunities in Southeast Asian markets to Australian business and consumers.
  • Placements and Internships Pilot Program for Young Professionals ($6 million over four years) which will help to build enduring links between Australia and Southeast Asian businesses.

This strategy reaffirms the Australian Government’s commitment to deepening our engagement with Southeast Asia.

The strategy is available at: Southeast Asia Economic Strategy | Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (dfat.gov.au).

Implementation of the strategy will be led by the Minister for Foreign Affairs, the Treasurer and the Minister for Trade and Tourism, supported by a joint taskforce between the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and the Treasury.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said:

“Southeast Asia’s fast-growing economies present a major opportunity for Australian business, but we haven’t kept pace with their exponential growth.

“Our economic future lies with Southeast Asia. This strategy outlines how we can harness this growth, and seize the vast trade and investment opportunities our region presents.

“I thank Special Envoy to Southeast Asia, Nicholas Moore, for developing a comprehensive strategy based on extensive consultation across the region.”

the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Penny Wong said:

“The Albanese Government is deploying all elements of our national power to make Australia stronger and more influential in the world, including by deepening our engagement in the region.

“Investing in priority sectors such as the green energy transition, infrastructure and food security is an investment in Australia’s future and the future of the region.

“The strategy reinforces that trade and investment diversification is key to our shared future prosperity and economic security. We seek genuine partnership with Southeast Asian economies to capture untapped opportunities for our mutual benefit.”

Treasurer Jim Chalmers said:

“Australians can be the beneficiaries of the some of the big shifts that are underway in the region by deepening our engagement in Southeast Asia.

“Whether it be the energy transformation, high-skilled manufacturing or world-class produce, we have the goods and services that the region needs to power its growth in the decades ahead.

“Greater integration with the dynamic markets of Southeast Asia will ultimately help deliver better jobs and better opportunities here at home.”

the Minister for Trade and Tourism, Don Farrell said:

“This strategy reinforces our intent and priorities to expand and diversify trade and investment between Australia and Southeast Asia.

“It charts a pathway to help Australian exporters, investors, tourism businesses, higher education providers, and creative sectors make the most of the booming opportunities in our region.”

GREENS WON’T RUBBER STAMP MURRAY DARLING BASIN BILL: SARAH HANSON-YOUNG

The Greens cannot support the Government’s proposed changes to the Murray Darling Basin Plan in their current form.

Senator Sarah Hanson-Young is Greens Spokesperson on the Environment, Manager of Business in Senate, Senator for South Australia:

“After more than a decade the Murray Darling Basin Plan has failed to deliver the water our environment needs. In order to get Greens support for delaying the Plan, we need a guarantee that water, real water, is delivered for South Australia, the environment and the health of the river.

“We will refer the legislation to a Senate inquiry for interrogation. We are willing to work with the Government to improve this Bill, but in its current state it does not deliver the assurances that South Australia or our River needs. 

“Without a guarantee that the 450GL of water that was promised will be delivered, this bill will just kick the can down the road. 

“After over a decade of inaction we must see water flowing for the environment before the next election. The river dies from the mouth up which is why the guaranteed delivery of 450GL to the Southern Basin will help ensure health of the entire river system, ecosystems and economies that rely on it.

“The Greens will continue conversations with the Government in good faith as the Bill goes to inquiry.” 

GREENS FORCE THE RELEASE OF VIP FLIGHT DOCUMENTS

The Greens today successfully passed a motion in the Senate requiring the Albanese Government to produce documents on multi-million dollar VIP flights. 

The order for the production of documents on the cost, dates and locations of special purpose flights as well as previous and current guidelines was passed in the Senate today with only Labor opposing. These documents must be provided no later than 13 September. 

The Albanese Government, in a last-ditch attempt to hide information from the public, tried to prevent key information from being disclosed and hide behind questionable security concerns. Despite this, the motion passed with the support of every Senator in the chamber except Labor. 

Senator David Shoebridge, Greens Defence spokesperson, said:

“There is a growing cult of secrecy in Canberra and especially in the Defence Department and this was a moment to push back against it. 

“Senior Ministers are taking these VIP flights at an eye-watering cost at a time when everyone else is cutting back, Defence Minister Marles has cost $3.6 million alone.

“Transparency is a vital check on excess and essential for good government.

“The official line is that Defence won’t reveal where MPs flew on VIP flights in 2021 and 2022 because it’s a security risk that might reveal “pattern of life” information. 

“These are not meant to be multi-million dollar taxis, they are meant to be special purpose flights, flights only taken for a special purpose. If there is a repeated pattern being shown then that’s a warning bell about potential misuse.

“You have to wonder if the real threat to security is in fact a threat to the job security of anyone who took advantage of the lack of transparency.

“We look forward to the public seeing the amended guidelines and details on their multi-million dollar flights next week.”

LABOR COMPLETES DOUBLE BACKFLIP TO SUPPORT GREENS INQUIRY INTO MIDDLE ARM GAS EXPANSION

Under pressure from the Greens, Labor has today backflipped again to support an important inquiry into the mammoth Middle Arm gas and petrochemical expansion, subsidised by taxpayers at a cost of $1.5b. The gas field is so large it will increase Australia’s emissions by 25% and blow the shrinking chance of the Albanese government meeting its climate targets.

Senator Sarah Hanson-Young is Spokesperson for the Environment & Manager of Greens Business in the Senate: 

“In the middle of the climate crisis, Anthony Albanese is continuing Scott Morrison’s gas fired recovery with $1.5 billion of taxpayer money to subsidise gas export and petrochemicals 3km away from the suburbs of Darwin. 

“As doctors have warned, the top end does not need another “Cancer Alley” like has happened with gas feedstock and petrochemical production in Louisiana.

“Gas fuels the climate crisis and taxpayers should not be subsidising its dangerous expansion.

“Greenwashing gas and ‘petrochemicals’ as renewables means this entire project requires closer scrutiny.”

The Middle Arm gas and petrochemical project is a $1.5b  the ‘gas fired recovery’ brainchild of former Dow Chemicals and Saudi Aramco chief and Donald Trump’s confidant, Andrew Liveris. 

U.S gas frackers Tamboran have rights over a site at the Middle Arm project to build a gas export hub to export gas overseas from the Beetaloo region.

A CHANGE IN CEO WON’T FIX QANTAS’S PROBLEMS – IT’S TIME TO CONSIDER BRINGING QANTAS BACK INTO PUBLIC HANDS

Elizabeth Watson-Brown, MP for Ryan and Greens spokesperson for Transport, Infrastructure and Sustainable Cities said:

“Alan Joyce has made Qantas’s name synonymous with price gouging, mismanagement, attacking workers’ pay and conditions, and scandal. I’m sure many Australians are happy to see him go.

“As CEO, Joyce has received bonuses of over $20 million, while workers and customers have lost out. Now that he’s being pushed out, the board should step in to ensure he receives no final bonus payout.

“But a change of CEO alone won’t fix Qantas’s problems. As long as Qantas remains a private, for-profit monopoly, we’re going to see more price gouging, more undermining of workers rights, more scandals.

“It’s time for a rethink. Instead of propping up Qantas’s profits, the government should take this moment to seriously look into bringing Qantas back into public ownership. 

“Bringing Qantas back into public hands would ensure no gouging or breaching of consumer rights, decent pay and conditions for workers, and fair prices for everyday travellers.”

“With 60% share of Australia’s aviation market, it makes no sense for Qantas to remain in private hands. Rather than protect Qantas’s monopoly status as ‘too big to fail’, the government should investigate bringing it back into public ownership.”

UK Government declares Wagner a terrorist organisation while Australia lags behind

I welcome the decision today by the UK Government to proscribe the Wagner Group as a terrorist organisation. This will make it illegal within the UK to be a member of the group or support its activities, and allows the UK government to seize its assets.

The UK Home Secretary Suella Braverman put it succinctly when she said the Wagner Group “are terrorists, plain and simple – and this proscription order makes that clear in UK law.” It follows a Biden Administration decision to designate Wagner a significant transnational criminal organisation in January.

I again call on the Albanese Government to act immediately in taking the steps necessary for Australia to join our allies and formally list the Wagner Group as a terrorist organisation. The Coalition stands ready to assist with any legislative changes required to take this action without further delay.

On 22 May I wrote to the Minister for Home Affairs and the Attorney-General asking them to investigate the listing of the Wagner Group as a terrorist organisation in light of its complicity in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and its extensive track record of abhorrent human rights abuses and offering the full support of the Coalition in doing so.

Australia could have led the world and acted early to rightly recognise the Wagner Group as a terrorist organisation and send a clear message that we will not tolerate violent acts of terrorism no matter where in the world they are occurring. Labor’s complacency has instead seen Australia lag behind our allies with no explanation for the government’s inaction.

The Albanese Government needs to explain when and how it plans to list Wagner a terrorist organisation to ensure Australia stands shoulder to shoulder with its allies in taking action against the abhorrent conduct of the Wagner Group.

Pornography industry welcomed government refusal to implement esafety commissioner recommendation

The eSafety Commissioner has faced questions about the Albanese Government’s refusal to support an age assurance trial aimed at protecting children from online harm.

Age assurance technology is designed to stop children from accessing inappropriate material online.

Communications Minister Michelle Rowland has been criticised by child protection advocates after rejecting a recommendation from her own online safety agency for the trial.

The eSafety Commissioner’s Roadmap for age verification had recommended that the Government:

“Trial a pilot before seeking to prescribe and mandate age assurance technology.”

Appearing on ABC 24 this afternoon, the eSafety Commissioner, Julie Inman Grant was asked what she made of the Government’s refusal to support the trial she’d recommended. She told the ABC:

“That was a question for Government. The Government made its decision and I need to get on with using the tools that I have.”

The comments come after the National Children’s Commissioner expressed disappointment at the Government’s failure to support the trial. Commissioner Anne Hollonds told ABC Television on the weekend that the trial was needed:

“So that we can safeguard children for whom this material, this content is really inappropriate, and actually can be quite dangerous.”

In contrast, the Eros Foundation General Manager Graeme Dunne welcomed the Government’s decision, in an interview with the ABC on 1 September.

Shadow Communications Minister David Coleman said the trial on age assurance technology should go ahead, as the eSafety Commissioner has recommended.

“Child online safety is a defining issue of our time and we must do everything we sensibly can to keep kids safe. It is impossible to understand why the Government is refusing to act on this recommendation.”

Transparency turbulence for Labor Government

The Senate has today made clear it’s expectations of greater transparency from the Albanese Labor Government on the use of Special Purpose Aircraft (SPA) flights.

As a result of motions moved by the Coalition and The Greens the Albanese Labor Government has been ordered:

  • to table information relating to SPA flights to the extent such information can be provided consistent with advice from security agencies;
  • to table all current and previous versions of the SPA Guidelines provided to officials around the use of SPA flights; and
  • to provide in confidence to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security (PJCIS) any related advice that informed the changes to the SPA Guidelines.

The Coalition’s motion means that there will be careful assessment, without breaching or risking security considerations, of the security advice that led to the changes to the SPA Guidelines.

This can then determine whether or not this Labor Government has applied it in a fair way or whether there has been gross overreach to use that security advice to avoid transparency.

The Coalition understands and respects the role our law enforcement and national security agencies play in providing advice to Government.

The PJCIS is well trusted to hold information in confidence, but it will enable scrutiny by the Opposition and indeed by Government backbenchers.

For a Prime Minister that lauded promises of a more accountable and transparent government, this chain of events only continues to demonstrate this Labor Government’s rank hypocrisy.

Labor desperate to avoid scrutiny over its draconian IR Bill

Labor yet again is resisting scrutiny of its draconian IR Bill.

Today in the House of Representatives Labor refused to support the Opposition’s proposal that the 278 page industrial relations Bill should be referred to a parliamentary committee.

A parliamentary committee inquiry would be an appropriate and wholly orthodox next step as the Parliament considers this long and complex Bill with profound economy wide implications.

But Labor’s refusal to allow this scrutiny of the Bill follows a regrettable pattern.

Yesterday Labor refused to support an Opposition proposal to adopt an orthodox timetable for this Bill, resuming debate in the next but one sitting week, to allow MPs to study the details of a 278 page Bill which was only made public yesterday.

Even before the Bill was introduced, Labor took extraordinary steps to avoid scrutiny, forcing the handful of people who were consulted to sign legally binding non-disclosure agreements, preventing them from disclosing publicly what they had been told about the Bill’s contents.

When a government goes to such efforts to avoid its legislation receiving scrutiny and examination, there is only one conclusion: it knows how bad the Bill is and is trying to hide the details as much as it can.