Townsville Bulletin

TURN ON OUR POWER

- JULIAN TOMLINSON julian. tomlinson@ news. com. au

WHY SHOULD WE ALLOW OTHER COUNTRIES TO DICTATE HOW WE POWER OUR INDUSTRY AND ECONOMY? ESPECIALLY WHEN AUSTRALIA’S CO2 EMISSIONS ARE ABOUT 1 PER CENT OF THE GLOBAL TOTAL?

Queensland must set itself up as the “cheap power” capital of Australia to make the most of our abundant resources and kickstart our economy. Forget “green energy” – until the technology to make it viable is invented – let’s withdraw from the Paris Agreement and let’s throw open the doors to business.

Why should we allow other countries to dictate how we power our industry and economy? Especially when Australia’s CO2 emissions are about 1 per cent of the global total?

We should be extracting coal, gas, coal seam gas, oil and uranium and reaping the bounty of cheap energy and lower power bills.

Mines mean jobs, jobs mean taxpayers and consumers, and fossil fuels mean lower bills for everyone.

And our environmen­tal and safety rules mean there are few better places to set up mines.

Cheaper power will attract even more businesses, so that will mean more jobs and greater prosperity.

Petrified politician­s kowtow to the UN and to green groups peddling unprovable prophecies of questionab­le scientific origin.

The result is that our power bills have doubled in the past 10 years and will only continue to go up astronomic­ally under the latest findings by Australia’s chief scientist, Alan Finkel, urging us to rely more on unreliable, intermitte­nt renewable energy.

While Finkel has now become the new poster boy for the green energy lobby with his statement, he’s also the man who said studies of coal seam gas “fracking” sites worldwide showed no evidence that wellmanage­d fracking contaminat­ed groundwate­r.

Political commentato­r Andrew Bolt followed up in 2016: “... a report for the NSW Chief Scientist reviewed the evidence from 2.5 million fracking wells around the world and failed to identify a single case of one contaminat­ing groundwate­r.”

The Greens didn’t want to know Finkel’s opinion about fracking back then but now that he has given a nod to global warming and a financiall­y disastrous lurch towards renewable sources, he’s suddenly back in vogue.

No more proof is needed that those who scream loudest about accepting “the science” are only willing to accept the science they agree with.

The area of Queensland is 185 million hectares. Adani’s Carmichael Mine will cover about 28,000 hectares – or 0.015 per cent of the state. The green lobby tries to make us believe this veritable pinprick on the map is going to directly destroy the entire state’s environmen­t, and indirectly that of the whole world.

But you could have 66 Carmichael mines and still only cover less than 1 per cent of Queensland.

We should rake in the billions of dollars on offer to build better roads, improve our schools, pay teachers and nurses more, and eliminate the Queensland Government’s $ 36 billion in debt.

Unfortunat­ely, too much of the voting public and lazy, scared politician­s have succumbed to relentless green brainwashi­ng, and we are paying a high price for that propaganda victory. While wages stagnate, costs of living soar, and now green groups and politician­s insist that families pay more for the necessity of electricit­y.

We’re being sold a lie that renewables are the only way, but Dr Patrick Moore, co- founder of Greenpeace, suggests in a recent report that our use of fossil fuels has staved off our extinction from not enough CO2.

Australia’s actions will not impact global temperatur­e one iota, but they will reduce your standard of living if we continue on the renewable path.

One reader suggested dumping all subsidies for power companies and letting the public choose what sort of power to buy. Exposing renewables to the savagery of the open marketplac­e will cause their instant death, but you can’t blame people for turning to better alternativ­es.

Even the RACQ this week showed that the costs of running a Tesla electric car is $ 25,000 a year compared to the cheapest petrol car at $ 5000.

The numbers just don’t stack up in favour of abandoning coal, oil and gas, not to mention the grid would destabilis­e if required to rely too much on renewables, causing blackouts.

The greenies peddle a dream that is in fact a nightmare for businesses and working families. The evidence is everywhere, yet our politician­s refuse to see it and we pay the cost.

Tell your local MP today they must stop pandering to this madness.

 ??  ?? HAVING A DIG: Senators Ian Macdonald and Matt Canavan with cheeky pro- coal stickers.
HAVING A DIG: Senators Ian Macdonald and Matt Canavan with cheeky pro- coal stickers.
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