Scott Morrison rejects net zero plan critics as David Attenborough takes aim at Australia
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Sir David said there are still some in Australia and America that pretend the problem of climate change does not exist.
"Even if we didn't cause it, we would have a moral responsibility to do something about thousands of men, women and children who've lost everything, everything. Can we just say goodbye and say this is no business of ours?"
âThere are still people in North America, there are still people in Australia who say âno, no, no, no, of course, itâs very unfortunate that there was that forest fire that absolutely demolished, incinerated that village, but itâs a one-off,ââ he told the BBC.
âParticularly if itâs going to cost money in the short term, the temptation is to deny the problem and pretend itâs not there,â he added.
âBut every month that passes, it becomes more and more incontrovertible, the changes to the planet that we are responsible for that are having these devastating effects.â
Sir David Attenborough in Iceland. Source: BBC America
"Whole parts of Africa are likely to be unliveable - people will simply have to move away because of the advancing deserts and increasing heat, and where will they go? Well, a lot of them will try to get into Europe.
"Do we say, 'Oh, it's nothing to do with us' and cross our arms?"
ð¬ð§ UK 2050 plan? 21 docs. 1868 pages. Heat & building strategy. Heat pump grants. EV incentives. End gas boilers by 2035, ICE sales by 2030! Treasury reviewed. CCC approved. Pathways for every sector to 2037. Legally binding. 5 year targets.ð¦ðº Aus? No plan. Just more bullshit.
Meanwhile, software billionaire and climate advocate Mike Cannon-Brookes slammed the presentation as "just more bullsh*t".
Mr Morrison rejected the criticisms claiming it came from people who wanted to tax, regulate and shut industries down.
"Everyone else who doesn't understand Australia, our economy and the challenges we have here are entitled to their opinions," he told the Seven Network on Wednesday.
"But I will do what is right for Australia and we are getting results."
The government argues it has reduced carbon emissions by 20 per cent since 2005 and projects a cut of 30 to 35 per cent by the end of the decade.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison has unveilled the government's plan to reach net zero emissions by 2050. Source: AAP
"Australia's actions and results speak more than the words of others," Mr Morrison said.
"We're getting it done, Australians want it done but they don't want to throw their livelihoods away."
Mr Morrison defended pinning hopes on technologies that have not yet been developed.
"I'm sure people said that to Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, but we didn't need a tax or a law to develop the iPhone or develop a COVID vaccine," he told 2GB radio.
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Labor climate spokesman Chris Bowen said the next election would be a climate change contest, labelling the announcement a "steaming pile of nothingness".
The opposition is waiting to see what comes out of the Glasgow summit before finalising a climate policy it will take to voters.
Energy Minister Angus Taylor was grilled about why modelling underpinning key assumptions about the economic impact of a 2050 target was not released.
"The modelling will be released at an appropriate time," he told the ABC.
The government plan claims 100,000 jobs will be created in renewable energy alongside 62,000 roles in regional mining and heavy industry.
It also suggests people will be on average $2,000 better off and electricity prices won't rise.
There are outstanding questions about what the Nationals were promised in exchange for the junior coalition partner's lukewarm support for a 2050 net-zero goal.
While Resources Minister Keith Pitt has returned to the cabinet, it is unclear what other sweeteners were offered.
With AAP
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