The Gold Coast Bulletin

The war’s over so

News Corp’s online Mission Zero forum on Thursday raised many issues, including the prediction that an end to Australia’s ‘Climate Wars’ is imminent, writes

- David Mills

THE ‘Climate Wars’ – that stultifyin­g policy logjam that killed prime ministeria­l careers stone dead and prompted a bajillion column inches over the past 15 years – may finally end this week, a leading Australian energy expert has predicted.

Speaking on Thursday as part of an online forum for News Corp’s Mission Zero series, Grattan Institute director Tony Wood said the setting of a net zero goal for 2050 was “so close you can just about smell it”.

With Prime Minister Scott Morrison close to confirming the position he will take to the COP26 conference in November, after a week of negotiatio­ns with the Nationals, Mr Wood said: “I think this week could be the end of the climate war in Australia. It may be next week, we’ll see. Peace will break out, not completely – it may be a cold war – but we can then see a pathway to our future.”

One of Australia’s leading climate thinkers and commentato­rs, Mr Wood said it made sense to start on the emissions reduction journey right away. “Every big capital decision is going to count if we’re going to get to net zero by 2050,” he said.

And “tens of thousands of smaller decisions” would also have to count, he added, citing the example of small business owners switching from gas to electricit­y.

Earlier in the forum, inventor and energy consultant Saul Griffiths also advocated early action on switching to renewables, saying it made economic sense. “We are only about onetenth of the way through this revolution,” he said. “We need to commit more and faster, so we can realise savings earlier.”

Mr Griffiths also made one of the more provocativ­e points of the forum, raising concern that even the best case scenarios of global warming in the recent IPCC report were predicated on a massive expansion of carbon sequestrat­ion schemes. By 2050 these prediction­s suggested we would need to sequester as much carbon as we emitted, he warned.

Such prediction­s were “absurd” and “unrealisti­c,” Mr Griffith said, but nations that wished to lead in this space would “go even harder and even faster to electrific­ation and decarbonis­ation”.

Former chief scientist Dr Alan Finkel said sequestrat­ion was just one part of the emissions puzzle, and the solution would require “a bit of everything”.

“You don’t start with offsets as a solution,” he said. “But as there will always be emissions we’ll need to sequester.”

Dr Finkel also provided some valuable perspectiv­e on how quickly economics had already changed what is possible in terms of reducing emissions. “If you go back to the 2000s, every pundit underestim­ated how rapidly the price of solar electricit­y would come down, and how wind would come down – we’re talking about a factor of nearly tenfold,” he said.

“It’s the same with batteries. I was in the electric car charging industry back in 2010, and we used to do projection­s about batteries, and we got everything wrong. We were using the best informatio­n available to us at the time.”

The forum did not shy away from some controvers­ial topics, with both “blue carbon” entreprene­ur Mark Carnegie and Nicky Ison from WWF Australia among the panellists who suggested a price on carbon will be necessary in order to reach net zero.

But there was optimism as well, with Ms Ison suggesting Australia was “yet again the lucky country” because of our bountiful sunshine and wind, and big reserves of lithium.

Fortescue Future Industries CEO Julie Shuttlewor­th was similarly upbeat, putting the case for green hydrogen.

“The technology is there; we just need to do it as scale to drive the cost down,” she said.

 ?? ?? Panellists at the online forum for the Mission Zero series were (clockwise from top left) Julie Shuttlewor­th, Saul Griffith, Tony Wood, Nicky Ison, Alan Finkel and Mark Carnegie.
Panellists at the online forum for the Mission Zero series were (clockwise from top left) Julie Shuttlewor­th, Saul Griffith, Tony Wood, Nicky Ison, Alan Finkel and Mark Carnegie.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia