Enquanto o “periférico”
Portugal se entretém com as descaradas pantomimas manipulativas do Costa, assim
vai o Planeta e o seu Futuro !!
OVOODOCORVO
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The carbon tax is dead and
there is nothing credible to take its place
Almost a decade of bruising debate has led to the absence of any serious
policy alternative and paralysis over the way forward
Lenore Taylor, political editor
theguardian.com,
Thursday 17 July 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/17/carbon-tax-is-dead-direct-action?CMP=fb_gu
What a complete and catastrophic failure of
the political system.
After climate policy helped dispatch three
prime ministers and two opposition leaders, and dominated three election
campaigns and eight years of polarising political debate, it has come to this:
we have no national climate policy.
After all that vitriol and hyperbolic
attack and all those reports and modelling and studies, and all last week’s
drama, we are back to exactly where we were before John Howard reluctantly said
he would introduce an emissions trading scheme in 2007. (He later said he did
it only because of political pressure, and never really believed in the idea.)
We know more than ever before that global
warming requires urgent international action, and we still know that a market
mechanism is the most efficient way to respond. But we appear to be politically
incapable of doing anything about it, other than watch people yell at each
other.
It is, of course, possible to reduce
emissions by means other than a carbon price. Tough regulations or carefully
targeted and rigorously assessed government incentives can also do the job.
But the government’s alternative “Direct
Action”, as it stands, is no such viable alternative. The legislation that
gives it any rigour may or may not pass the Senate.
And there is evidence Direct Action – which
hands out competitive grants to those volunteering to reduce emissions, but
imposes no overall limits on greenhouse pollution – will cost far more to
achieve far less than the carbon price would have, with the cost being levied
on taxpayers rather than on polluting industries.
It is possible the amendments being
negotiated with the government by independent senator Nick Xenophon might make
the scheme slightly more credible, but not by much.
The government did win an election
promising to “axe the tax”. But did the voters who backed the slogan really
intend that Australia
be left with no climate change policy at all?
Did they really think they would be $550 a
year better off? That was treasury’s best guess of the one-off price increases
due to the tax, but the inflationary effect turned out to be less than treasury
estimated, and to the extent that prices across the board did go up there is no
evidence that anything other than electricity and gas prices will be coming
down. That lamb roast didn’t get any more expensive when the tax was imposed in
2012 and it won’t be getting any cheaper today. So many doorstops, so little
substance.
As eight years’ work by thousands of people
disappears with the Senate’s vote, many may have cause for regrets.
Labor deliberately constructed its initial
2009 emissions trading scheme with a view to getting it through parliament with
the votes of the Coalition, rather than the Greens, but then applied maximum
political pressure to then leader Malcolm Turnbull. When he was ousted and the
scheme was voted down, Labor lacked the courage to take it to a double
dissolution election. Opposition leader Bill Shorten expressed some of those
regrets last week. He didn’t mention any regrets Labor might also have for then
effectively vacating the debate for so long.
The Greens must surely have some big
regrets, since they voted down the 2009 scheme because it “locked in” the
inadequate 5% target, only to discover that five years later 5% is still the
target, but the nation has no credible means of getting there.
And those in the Coalition who actually
think global warming is a thing must deeply regret that Abbott’s “axe the tax’
juggernaut has rolled over the aspects of the original Direct Action plan that
might have made it more credible over time.
But that’s all in the sorry pages of recent
political history now, and the absence of any credible policy is the big and
pressing question for the future.
Whatever happens, Direct Action will
probably only matter for a short time – because even if it manages to reduce
Australia’s emissions for a few years, its cost will quickly become prohibitive
as Australia is required to reduce its emissions further. That point was made
repeatedly by Malcolm Turnbull back when he still talked about these things,
and has been repeatedly borne out by modelling (done by third parties because
the government hasn’t done any, preferring as prime minister Tony Abbott said
during the election campaign, to just “have a crack”).
Which means those concerned about climate
change, and the need for Australia
to do its fair share of the international task of reducing emissions, need to
regroup and re-prosecute the case for some kind of market mechanism or some
other effective policy.
A good place to start would be the widely
accepted, but misguided, idea that the point of comparison for our efforts on
this issue vis a vis other countries is whether or not they have an ETS. No,
the point of comparison is the target by which each country agrees to reduce
their emissions. The most efficient way for us, or anyone else, to get there is
up to us. We would look to what other countries but it does not have to be the
determining factor.
Clive Palmer’s alternative emissions
trading scheme is now delayed and looking increasingly meaningless. It would
put the existing architecture into a kind of zero-price “sleeping beauty style”
hibernation, with the independent Climate Change Authority getting a
last-minute stay of execution so it can advise on when it should be re-awoken.
But the conditions for reawakening are becoming so onerous, it is unlikely to
matter.
Those concerned about climate change will
have to re-prosecute the case over time, as international action accelerates
and Direct Action is found to be wanting. It is a sad and sorry place for Australia to be
after such a long and rugged process.
Perhaps the last word should go to those
well-known job-destroying, economy-hating, green-left anarchists in the federal
treasury, whose comments in the "blue book" prepared in the event of
a Coalition victory in 2010 were released under freedom of information.
Treasury described a carbon-pricing
mechanism as "the only realistic way of achieving the deep cuts in
emissions that are required".
They went on: ''A market mechanism can
achieve the necessary abatement at a cost per tonne of emissions that is far
lower than alternative direct-action policies. Moreover, many direct action
measures cannot be scaled up, and, for those that can, the cost per tonne of
abatement would rise rapidly, imposing further costs on taxpayers and
consumers. All of this serves to underscore the conclusion that the sooner an
emissions trading scheme can be implemented the better.
"Too much time has already been
wasted, for which the Australian community will necessarily pay a high
price."
Four years later we are still wasting time,
and the cost continues to climb.
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