The Weekend Post

Why net zero has so much value

COMMUNITY LEADERS, BUSINESSES AND INFLUENTIA­LS IN CAIRNS HAVE THEIR SAY ON ACHIEVING A NET ZERO TARGET BY 2050.

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Joe Moro FNQ Growers president

I think net zero is achievable. At the end of the day it’s all about new technology coming online. As long as farmers are not expected to bare the brunt of it and we can get some relief and not be put in the same situation as the Kyoto Agreement when lands were tied up. A number of players in the region are doing things already. They are looking at using alternativ­e power sources. Some farmers are not doing a lot at this stage and have been burdened with the cost of previous policy settings.

Richard Ireland Ireland’s joint managing director

My personal view is the only way to really get there is with nuclear. All the so-called green sources of energy have an enormous carbon footprint in their constructi­on. Looking at the range of them, nuclear is the most efficient of them all. It is something that needs to be revisited, if you want to be truly effective, you need to have nuclear. Our business was an early adaptor of trying to reduce our emissions. We put in $300,000 on solar 10 years ago.

Claudia Martius Co-owner of Divine Gelato

If everyone put in the effort we can do it. We consume a lot of energy in the shop, so we are very energy conscious anyhow because of costs but also sustainabi­lity. We would like to get more solar energy. Where I come from (Germany) we have companies that sell green energy and it is not much. We are trying to shut down our airconditi­oning when not necessary. For a long time we have had paper cups and I am chatting to the people who provide the cups as we still get everything in plastic.

Tina O’Hagan Food Service Consultanc­y

We need to start somewhere. What I am trying to do is eradicate the waste of food waste into landfill. The majority of people don’t know what they are wasting. The key area of food waste is one of the things that contribute­s to methane in landfill. This is a solution that eradicates the needs for any of these things to go into landfill at all. Everything is completely and utterly recyclable.

Ian Kermide North Queensland Recycling owner

All I can say at this time is sure we have to reduce carbon emissions.

Anybody who says there is not a problem has their head buried in the sand.

Because nobody wants to lose creature comforts, you must consider nuclear. And the centre of Australia is the most stable rock of anywhere in the world. People have got to think about this nuclear power. I have solar power on my sheds here for what we use during the day. I have solar power in my

Geoff Holland Cairns activist

We will not achieve the target at the rate we are going. The council has been conducting community consultati­on with their climate strategy which is fantastic. I know there are some good people in council working on this but I am cautious because the council refuses to declare a climate emergency. We need them to do that to send a strong signal to the community. We want to clarify we are in a climate emergency, it’s real and we

need to dedicate resouces to it. home; it’s been there for years. So I am a believer and if we had more turbine power it would be a great thing but we don’t.

Gloria Finau

Stay-at-home mum from

Mount

Sheridan

The hope for me is that we will achieve it but the realist in me says probably not.

Because of the things you need — you’d need electric motor vehicles by that time. Everything would have to change by energy source. I sometimes try to conserve energy but that is more to bring the energy bill down. When I use my car and stuff I should probably be more conscious. I think there is not much education in terms of what the public should do.

Peppi Iovannella Down Under Cruise and Dive managing director

The discussion is irrelevant because it is inevitable due to the cost benefit of the new technology. We are moving that way, we are currently investigat­ing down the road to get hydrogen compulsion or electric. The next design would be incorporat­ing that. The next step won’t be diesel. It will be either hydrogen or electric. I am heavily invested into battery technology in shares. I get regular updates of the progress and it is only three years away at most.

Molly Steer 13-year-old activist

We need to act now because most of the bigger countries in the world have been working on it a lot more. We have been lagging behind a bit, but now it is time for action. Just to start and do whatever we can. The coral and marine life can’t keep suffering through water temperatur­e increasing and bleaching. We need to stop pollution and focus on zero emission.

Each of us has a role to play in this; we can’t just sit back and think someone else will be able to fix it and that means everyone. From the highest level of the government, to the adults and all the kids like me.

Sheridan Morris Reef and Rainforest Research Centre managing director

The big thing for this region, what is extraordin­arily important is our long-term sustainabl­e management of the Reef. Now clearly when we have situations like we did in 2016-17 where we had mass bleachings of the Reef area up here and 2020 when there was a smaller bleaching down further south, this really knocks our Reef systems around and we can’t continue to do that. So what we need to do is slow down the pace of change to enable the Reef to adapt. It will play out in the same way for the wet tropics. One of the very frustratin­g things too about climate is it’s very hard to think about what you can do individual­ly or what real things you can do.

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