I think NZ's John Key would be more than happy to go along with this
Australia,
Canada seek center-right alliance to thwart climate change
initiatives
The
pair signaled that they want to coalesce “like-minded” countries
– the five Commonwealth countries of Australia, Britain, Canada,
India, and New Zealand – to oppose efforts such as the Obama
administration’s press for climate change moves through forums like
the G20.
Abbott
and Harper say that policies that aim to ease the effects of a
warming Earth - such as a carbon tax - are left-liberal schemes to
impose higher taxes and further state intervention into the economy.
''We
think that climate change is a significant problem, it’s not the
only or even the most important problem the world faces but it is a
significant problem and its important every country should take the
action that it thinks is best to address emissions,'' Abbott
said from Ottawa, according to
The Sydney Morning Herald.
Abbott
did applaud the Obama administration’s plan to require coal-fired
power plants to cut emissions by 30 percent by 2030, since the
proposal does not put a price on carbon.
''I
am encouraged that President Obama is taking what I would regard as
direct action measures to reduce emissions, this is very similar to
the action my government proposes in Australia.''
Abbott
added that climate change policies must not “clobber
the economy” in
the process of mitigating what climate experts see as widespread
drought, famine, flooding, erratic weather patterns, and large-scale
devastation across the globe, not least in Australia.
Harper
echoed the “pro-business” sentiments.
''It's
not that we don't seek to deal with climate change,'' he
said. ''We
seek to deal with it in a way that enhances our ability to create
jobs and growth, this is their position.”
''No
country is going to take actions that are going to deliberately harm
jobs and growth in their country, we are just a bit more frank about
that than other countries,” Harper
added.
Abbott
voiced his disdain for any carbon pricing initiatives.
''There
is no sign - no sign - that trading schemes are increasingly being
adopted,'' he
said. ''If
anything, trading schemes are being discarded, not adopted.”
In
the US, the Obama administration’s plan amounts to cutting
greenhouse gas emissions by a third of 2005 levels by 2030.
The
reduction is equal to the emissions from powering more than half the
homes in the US for one year. It is aimed “to
avoid up to 6,600 premature deaths, up to 150,000 asthma attacks in
children, and up to 490,000 missed work or school days, providing up
to $93 billion in climate and public health benefits,”says
the statement from the Environmental Protection Agency, the
regulatory body that drew up the plan.
US
officials have met opposition from Australian counterparts in pushing
climate change as an agenda item during November’s G20 summit in
Brisbane.
''I'd
be surprised if climate change doesn't come up as part of the
G20,'' Abbott
said, though he added that climate change concerns have their place
at the United Nations, not necessarily the economic-focused G20.
Australian
opposition leader Bill Shorten accused Abbott and his “flat-Earth
views” of being out of touch with the nation and the world.
Climate
change is ''not
just an environmental issue, it is a security issue and it is
absolutely an economic issue,” he
told Fairfax Media, adding that initiatives towards cleaner air,
lower pollution, and newer technologies are also good for the global
economy.
Australia
is fresh off the hottest
12-month period in
recorded history, as the country has experienced brutal heat waves
the last two summers. The extreme weather is, in part, attributed to
global warming.
“If
you want to look for effects of climate change, Australia is the
poster child in many respects,” said
Kevin Trenberth, a climate researcher at the US National Center for
Atmospheric Research.
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