NSW predicted to miss legislated emissions targets
09 May 2024
NSW is tipped to miss
emissions-reduction targets, prompting calls to cut back coal mine expansions.
(Darren Pateman/AAP PHOTOS)
NSW is
predicted to fall short of meeting the emissions-reductions targets the state
government legislated six months ago.
Official
figures show the state is on track for a 44 per cent cut in greenhouse gas
emissions by 2030, compared with the in-law target of 50 per cent.
The
numbers also show a projected cut of 65 per cent by 2035, behind a target of 70
per cent.
The
forecasts are based on current tracking using planned abatement measures.
Campaigners
say the figures call into question decisions to approve the expansion of
multiple coal mines, which contribute to stationary and fugitive emissions as
part of the forecasts.
Legalise
Cannabis MP Jeremy Buckingham labelled the figures "an alarm bell everyone
in NSW needs to pay attention to".
"My
support to this government depends on them being serious in their action on
climate change," he told reporters on Wednesday.
"They
cannot continue to approve new coal and gas projects and they have to act to
address the backwards slide in our greenhouse gas targets."
Independent
Wagga Wagga MP Joe McGirr said rural and regional communities were feeling the
effects of climate change more strongly than others.
"Regional
communities are putting in a lot of the hard yards supporting the
infrastructure for renewable energy that's going to save this state.
"We
don't want to see those hard yards ... blown away on more coal projects."
The
state government passed laws in November with cross-parliament support that
require a 50 per cent cut in greenhouse gas emission by 2030 and a 70 per cent
cut by 2035 on the way to net zero emissions by 2050.
Anti-coal
mining campaigners Lock the Gate called for further investment in and support
for clean-energy alternatives.
"It's
clear the massive pipeline of proposed coal projects must not go ahead if NSW
is going to have any chance of getting back on track and meeting the legislated
targets," the group said in a statement.
The NSW
government has been contacted for comment.