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| If you thought the climate debate has been ugly, you haven't seen anything yet - Marc Hudson. |
To recap: with the release of the climate review’s terms of
reference at the end of 2016, the federal environment and energy minister, Josh
Frydenberg, appeared to place on the table an emissions intensity scheme (a
widely supported form of carbon pricing). He then wisely went to Antarctica.
After its day in the sun, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull
swiftly backtracked in part due to pressure from conservatives within the Coalition.
By allowing a small group of politicians to take the most cost-effective policy
off the table at the outset, Turnbull has made the coming year(s) that much
harder to manage.
In the same week, Chief Scientist Alan Finkel reported his
initial findings on the security of the National Electricity Market. He stated
that his review “will continue to analyse all the options to ensure future
security of power supply and compliance with climate obligations”.
And that was only 2016…
Read the piece on The
Conversation by a PhD Candidate from the Sustainable Consumption Institute
at the University of Manchester, Marc Hudson - “Australian climate politics in 2017: a guide for the perplexed.”

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