I can name the top criminals of the English-speaking world -
Barack Obama, David Cameron, Tony Abbott, John Key, Stephen Harper.
And let us not forget the hairstyle-in-seach-of-a-brain.
Australian
Prime Minister Attempts to Undermine Global Climate Action
Australia’s
Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, suggests that all that is needed to
mitigate climate change is to plant more trees. Photo
courtesy of Shutterstock
2
July, 2014
How
are we going to mitigate climate
disruption? By
planting
more trees,
according to Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott.
In
an effort to undermine the first-ever
standards to clean up carbon pollution
from power plants proposed this month as a part of the Obama
administration’s Clean
Power Plan,
Abbott is attempting
to join forces with
the “like-minded” right wing leaders in the UK, New Zealand and
Canada.
Their
goal? Stop the global effort to address climate disruption—at
places like the upcoming
G20 Summit in
Brisbane, Australia—and completely shutter all efforts to make
curbing carbon pollution a global initiative.
Instead
of outright denying the facts of climate disruption—like
many Republicans in the U.S.—these
right wing leaders at least recognize that climate disruption is an
issue and are looking to energy
efficiency as one way to realistically sustain their energy use for
the future. But the progress stops there. Instead of taking the
definitive action needed to protect our planet and public
health,
Abbott and his allies would rather protect
the interests of big polluters
than listen to their own citizens.
In
fact, Abbott believes that the best way to mitigate the severe
effects of climate disruption—including the recent unprecedented
droughts, floods and wildfires that
have been plaguing Australia—is “to cultivate better soils, to
plant more trees, to take the kind of direct action measures which we
certainly intend to take in Australia.”
But
by ignoring the harmful
effects carbon pollution from
coal,
oil and natural gas on both our public health and our planet, Abbott
is not only completely failing to take direct action, he is
ultimately helping to further the climate disruption that is so
drastically affecting Australians.
And
this isn’t the first time Prime Minister Abbott has prioritized big
business over the fragile and priceless environment in Australia. For
years, he has worked to revoke the World Heritage Site status of
both the
Tasmanian forest
and the Great Barrier Reef in an effort to increase logging and
dredge
for coal exports.
It is at the expense of some of the world’s greatest natural
treasures that Abbott has tried to leave his legacy.
Unfortunately,
Prime Minister Abbott hasn’t been alone in this quest to destroy
the Great Barrier Reef. In fact, the
U.S. Export-Import Bank has been planning to open massive coal mines
in Australia’s Galilee Basin and
dredge one of the most fragile ecosystems in the world. If their plan
comes to fruition, not only will Abbott make money off the Reef’s
destruction, but your American tax dollars will have helped him do
it.
Luckily,
many people down under are fighting back against Prime Minister
Abbott’s extreme views.
Just
recently, activists
were able to save the Leard State Forest from
the needless clear cutting by the Whitehaven Coal company. In this
major victory for environmental champions, instead of building a new
coal mine in this critical habitat, the coal company has been ordered
to stop clearing during the winter when many threatened species are
hibernating, thus protecting these species and this important forest.
Even
more, these Australian environmental champions come from all
backgrounds, including the Australian Labor Party leader Bill
Shorten.
In
an interview with
The
Sydney Morning Herald,
Mr. Shorten touted climate disruption as an across-the-board issue
that will affect not only the environment but also national security
and the economy.
That’s
why it is so crucial for Prime Minister Abbott and his allies to not
only address climate disruption in their home countries but at every
major international forum, including the G20 Summit. It is only
through global cooperation in the fight against climate disruption
that we can protect our futures for generations to come.
Where is batman when we need him?
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