Mercury (Hobart)

State far from a climate action leader, but we can be if we act now

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“TASMANIA is a genuine leader in responding to climate change.” That is the State Government’s bold claim in the blurb promoting its “Climate Action 21” strategic plan, but it’s simply not true.

In fairness to the Hodgman Government, from the day in 2007 when Paul Lennon released a draft climate strategy, no Tasmanian administra­tion has produced any climate measure of consequenc­e.

This is despite releasing strategies in 2008, 2011, 2014, 2016 and 2017. These climate strategies seem to be devices for going nowhere, for preserving the status quo, or as props for ministers to hold up in parliament to show they’ve done something.

Assuming the primary goal of Tasmania’s climate strategies is lower greenhouse emissions, the data would indicate we’re anything but a global leader.

The Federal Government is notoriousl­y slow to release data, but the latest available full year (2017) shows Tasmanian emissions were more than a million tonnes above those for 2016, with rises in every sector: land use, agricultur­e, industry, energy and waste.

If Tasmania were a country, its emissions per person in 2017 would have put us in the top 10 per cent of developed nations. That’s not to say nothing is being done about climate change.

The government’s Climate Change Office is a valuable source of informatio­n and advice, and local government is taking steps to reduce environmen­tal impact and adapt to changing conditions.

But our institutio­ns of government were designed in an age when time was of little consequenc­e, but those days have gone. Climate change demands urgent action.

Our claims to leadership were based on paradigms that simply don’t stack up – on a hydro system built many decades ago and a rate of forest regrowth that is unsustaina­ble.

But we can build on our island’s advantages to become

the leader we claim to be.

The first thing to do is stop messing around with disposable strategies and develop an action plan that is mandated through legislatio­n.

The fact that we don’t have one – that we have never had one, under any administra­tion – is a killer blow to any government’s credibilit­y.

So far our only climate legislatio­n is the Lennon government’s Climate Change (State Action) Act of 2008, which specified no action but did set up an advisory committee.

Parliament has revisited this legislatio­n just once, in 2014, to abolish the advisory committee – hardly an advance.

The record is dismal, but it can be rectified. The Hodgman Government can start claiming leadership when it puts in place a comprehens­ive Climate Change Act that spells out actions to make our island home more sustainabl­e and more equitable.

Peter Boyer, who began his journalism career at the Mer

cury, specialise­s in the science and politics of climate change.

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