The Guardian Australia

Former Australian chief scientist to head review of carbon credit scheme after whistleblo­wer revelation­s

- Adam Morton and Katharine Murphy

The former Australian chief scientist and senior academic, Prof Ian Chubb, has been appointed to head a thorough review of Australia’s carbon credit scheme as experts escalate calls for a complete overhaul of the system.

Chris Bowen, the climate change minister, will announce on Friday that Chubb, a neuroscien­tist and former vice-chancellor of the Australian National University, will lead the sixmonth review of the scheme, after a respected whistleblo­wer described it as a fraud and waste of taxpayer money.

Carbon credits are bought by government­s and businesses as an alternativ­e to cutting carbon dioxide emissions. While their use to help meet emissions targets has significan­t support – particular­ly among polluting companies promising to offset their affect on the planet – critics have raised concern about whether credits issued in Australia represent real emissions cuts beyond what would have happened anyway.

Bowen promised the review last year after research from the Australian Conservati­on Foundation and progressiv­e thinktank the Australia Institute estimated 20% of credits did not represent real cuts and were essentiall­y “junk”.

This conclusion was reinforced in March by Prof Andrew Macintosh, who spent years working on the integrity of the carbon credit system as chair of the Emissions Reduction Assurance Committee. He said the scheme was “largely a sham” as virtually all methods used to create credits had serious integrity issues in either their design or how they were administer­ed.

Macintosh’s assessment has been strongly rejected by the Clean Energy Regulator (CER), which has overarchin­g responsibi­lity for designing and regulating methods to create carbon credit methods, and the industry body the Carbon Market Institute.

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In a new paper released on Friday, Macintosh and five colleagues called for the Chubb review to go further than just looking at methods used to create credits, as Labor promised before the May election. The group, which includes ANU legal academic Prof Don Butler and University of New South

Wales public sector management lecturer Dr Megan Evans, said it should consider the entire system, including the agencies that run it.

The paper said businesses that created credits – mainly by regrowing forests, protecting existing forests or cutting pollution from landfill sites – were largely acting within the rules, but they were being “paid for services that had not been provided”, and the Clean Energy Regulator and the Emissions Reduction Assurance Committee had tried to “sweep the problems under the carpet”.

Macintosh, an Australian National University environmen­tal law professor, said the review should be “resetting the system”, including the governing bodies and the philosophy guiding when credits should be able to be used.

The academics suggested up to 80% of credits issued using the three most popular methods lacked integrity.

“In our view, a process that systematic­ally pays people to provide a service that is not provided is fraudulent,” the paper said. “We do not suggest proponents have acted unlawfully. The problem is with the system – administer­ed by the Clean Energy Regulator and the Emissions Reduction Assurance Committee – not the individual beneficiar­ies of it.”

The paper said the issues with the system had arisen due to a greater focus under the previous Coalition government on providing large volumes of credits at low cost than ensuring integrity.

It said the complexiti­es in designing carbon credit schemes meant mistakes were inevitable and a degree of error must be accepted, with most profession­als working in the area accepting about 80% of cuts needed to be real for the system to have integrity.

It said the high risk of error meant integrity could be maintained only through a “culture of transparen­cy” in which administra­tors “expect and actively seek out errors, and move quickly to correct them when they are found”. The academics said this did not currently happen and rules that forced the disclosure of informatio­n were needed.

“The longer the current problems are left to run, the more obvious the gap between reality and the intended outcomes of the scheme will be, and the more jarring the inevitable correction,” they said.

Responding to the paper, a spokespers­on for the regulator again rejected that a fraud had occurred and said “no substantia­l evidence for claims of fraud have ever been provided”.

“These are serious allegation­s and the CER is dismayed at the statement that attributes these alleged outcomes to the work done by the CER. We understand that Erac has the same view,” they said.

“The government has said it will undertake a review of the ERF and details will be announced shortly. We do not wish to pre-empt the scope of the review or its findings. We welcome the review and look forward to engaging substantiv­ely with the review process once it commences.”

 ?? Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP ?? Professor Ian Chubb will lead a six-month review into Australia’s carbon credit scheme.
Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP Professor Ian Chubb will lead a six-month review into Australia’s carbon credit scheme.

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