The Manila Times

Australian opposition sets emission reduction target

CANBERRA: Australia’s opposition Labor Party has promised to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 43 percent from the 2005 levels by 2030 if it wins the next election.

Labor leader Anthony Albanese announced on Friday the party’s emissions reduction target, setting climate change as one of the most important policy issues for the next election, which was due to be held by May 2022.

It was slightly lower than its 45-percent target in the 2019 election, significantly higher than the governing coalition’s 26- to 28-percent target.

The coalition estimated that Australia’s emissions would fall by as much as 35 percent by 2030 but had not formally committed to that target.

Albanese, who had criticized the government’s 2050 net-zero plan for lacking detail, said his medium-term target came with the “most comprehensive modeling” ever undertaken by an opposition party for any policy.

“Our plan will create 604,000 extra jobs by 2030. Five out of every six of these will be in regional Australia,” Albanese said.

“Australian business is leading. It is time that the Australian government caught up. That is why our plan to create jobs, cut power bills, boost renewables and reduce emissions is the right plan for Australia,” Albanese added.

If elected in 2022, Albanese promised that Labor would achieve its goal by upgrading the electricity grid, developing a national electric vehicle strategy and rolling out 85 solar banks across the country.

In response, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said he expected Labor’s target to be higher.

“And if they have to get into that option with the Greens to form [a] government, it won’t be 43. That will be the opening bid, and it’s going to end a lot higher than that,” Morrison said, adding that “there’s nothing safe” about a Labor-Greens government.

Asia And Oceania

en-ph

2021-12-05T08:00:00.0000000Z

2021-12-05T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://digitaledition.manilatimes.net/article/281951726103827

The Manila Times