Greens urge Bowen on coal and gas
14 Nov 2022
The Greens are urging Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen to
take a concrete position on new coal and gas projects with him to the COP27
summit in Egypt to reassure Australia's Pacific neighbours.
Party leader Adam Bandt says the United Nations, which is
hosting the international forum, has called out nations seeking to 'greenwash'
their climate credentials by pledging net zero but opening new coal and gas
developments and relying on questionable offsets to meet targets.
Meanwhile, Pacific Island leaders have called for a coal and gas
non-proliferation agreement.
The proposal is similar to one previously used to wind down the
threat of nuclear war and demands richer polluting nations compensate those
most affected by global heating.
"Labor must tell the (COP27) summit what it will do about
new coal and gas," Mr Bandt is expected to tell his audience during a
speech at Melbourne's LaTrobe University on Monday.
"The two warnings from the summit are that low pledges have
us on a highway to hell and the net zero pledges are just 'greenwashing' if
they use dodgy offsets to try to hide new coal and gas projects.
"The secretary-general of the UN isn't mincing words when
he calls greenwashing via offsets rank deception."
Mr Bandt will say Australia, as a wealthy nation, has a
responsibility to clean up the mess created by the coal and gas it has
extracted and should commit to supporting the COP27 loss and damage fund with
$1.5 billion.
Meanwhile, Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek has asserted
Australia working with China co-operatively on climate change would be in
everybody's interest.
Such issues are too big for any one country to tackle
individually, she said on Sunday.
While uncertainty surrounds whether Prime Minister Anthony
Albanese will meet Chinese President Xi Jinping at the G20 summit later this
week, Ms Plibersek said talks with China on the matter would be significant.