Thanks for joining us, here’s a quick breakdown of what we’ve covered:
- The Liberal Party has formally announced plans to abandon its policy of net zero emissions by 2050, which it took the last two elections after former prime minister Scott Morrison committed them to it in late 2021.
- This decision came after a five-hour party meeting on Wednesday where a majority of members spoke in favour of abandoning the target.
- It also follows the National Party, its junior partner in the Coalition, abandoning net zero earlier this month. The parties will now negotiate over the next two days and meet on Sunday to decide their joint policy.
- In making the announcement, Opposition leader Sussan Ley said her party will dismantle the Labor government’s environment and energy policies if elected, scrapping targets on reducing emissions and renewable energy generation.
- The plan involves preventing early coal plant closures, lifting Australia’s ban on nuclear energy and increasing investment in new gas supply and infrastructure.
- The party is also not withdrawing from the Paris Agreement. Julia Dehm, an associate law professor at La Trobe University, told Bloomberg the plan was not in line with the Paris Agreement, which requires emission reduction commitments that “represent a progression beyond previous commitments”.
Key quotes
Sussan Ley, opposition leader: “I can 100 per cent guarantee power bills will be lower under us. But it’s 2.5 years until the election. I want to make this point very clear: Those energy bills will be much lower under us. And on the eve of the election we may be able to give you further detail.”
Dan Tehan, opposition emissions reduction spokesperson: “[Energy affordability] is all going to be about energy abundance. We have to use our natural resources to make sure that we are bringing as much downward pressure on energy prices as we possibly can. We should use all those natural resources to do so. The second thing is we’re going to make sure that we’re doing our fair share when it comes to emissions reduction. On average, we’re going to reduce emissions year-on-year, like we did successfully in government.”
David Littleproud, Nationals leader: ”What we’ve heard from the Liberal Party gives us great hope that in the coming days that we’ll sit down constructively with them … to get to a final position that I believe will give the Australian people an intelligent conversation. Not one predicated on pure old politics of whether we believe in climate change or not. The science is settled. What isn’t settled is the economics. That is the debate we want to have.”
Anthony Albanese, prime minister: ”They’re walking away from climate action because they fundamentally do not believe in the science of climate change. Australians cannot afford to keep paying the price of Coalition infighting when it comes to climate policy and energy policy.”
Chris Bowen, energy and climate change minister: “The Liberals haven’t listened, they haven’t learnt, and they certainly haven’t changed. Instead of having a modern energy plan they want to ‘sweat coal’ which means more ageing, unreliable coal in the system for longer – and Australians will pay.”
Sarah Hanson-Young, Greens environment spokesperson: “Now the government has to pick a lane. They can work with the big polluters and the big loggers and the climate deniers in the Liberal Party. Or they can choose the lane with the Greens and we can get environmental protection done.”
With Bloomberg
Thanks for following our live blog – that’s a wrap for today. We’ll be back tomorrow with more live news updates.