The Guardian Australia

Scott Morrison seeks internatio­nal partners to develop low-emissions technology at Biden climate summit

- Katharine Murphy and Adam Morton

Scott Morrison will use a global climate action summit organised by the United States president Joe Biden to foreshadow a spend of $565.8m over the next eight years to build internatio­nal collaborat­ion to drive developmen­t of some low-emissions technologi­es.

The Australian prime minister will tell the virtual summit during a contributi­on expected on Thursday night that he wants to build practical, projectbas­ed internatio­nal partnershi­ps to accelerate new energy technologi­es and drive down costs. The spending, to be confirmed in the May budget, will be accompanie­d by additional domestic investment in hydrogen hubs and carbon capture and storage projects.

The government says priority countries for future internatio­nal collaborat­ion on investment­s in low-emissions technology include the US, UK, Germany, Japan, Korea, and Singapore, as well as India, Canada and New Zealand.

Priority technologi­es include hydrogen and carbon capture and storage, low- or zero-emissions steel production, low carbon alumina and aluminium production, and zero carbon liquefied natural gas production and shipping to Asian countries.

Australia is under acute pressure going into Biden’s summit about its comparativ­e lack of ambition on climate action, and experts suggest the Morrison government will have to increase spending on technologi­cal developmen­t significan­tly if it is to keep pace with new energy economy investment­s happening in the US, Britain and Europe.

The Biden administra­tion is set to announce a 2030 pledge to cut emissions twice as deep as Australia’s as the president hosts 40 world leaders at the virtual summit. New announceme­nts are also expected from Japan, Canada and South Korea, with the possibilit­y of China following later this year ahead of a major climate conference in Glasgow in November.

China has confirmed it will attend Biden’s summit, and the UK – the host of Cop26 in Glasgow in November – signalled on Wednesday it would boost its ambition for emissions reduction.

Following recommenda­tions of the government’s statutory climate advisers, Britain will cut carbon dioxide by 78% by 2035 compared with 1990 levels

– an increase from the current target of a 68% reduction by 2030. Australia’s emissions reduction target for 2030 is a cut of between 26 and 28% on 2005 levels.

While Morrison hyped the potential for hydrogen during a visit to a marginal electorate on the Central Coast of New South Wales on Wednesday, declaring Australia could develop “hydrogen valleys” like Silicon Valley in the US, recent research conducted for the United Nations environmen­t program quantifyin­g “green recovery” spending by major economies put Australia at the bottom of the list.

Morrison has this week foreshadow­ed spending of $275.5m over five years to accelerate the developmen­t of four additional clean hydrogen hubs, with some of the funding to be allocated in the run up to next year’s federal election. But the recent research from Oxford University’s Economic Recovery Project showed Germany – a likely partner with Australia in one of the projects – spent $9bn on hydrogen alone as part of the Covid-19 recovery.

The investor community has told the Morrison government it needs to increase ambition by 2030 if Australia is to comply with the Paris agreement goal of attempting to limit global heating to 1.5C and hold capital in the country when other jurisdicti­ons have more stable climate change policies. But the government is not expected to make new concrete commitment­s at the Biden summit.

The government has identified new battery technologi­es and critical minerals as potential avenues for collaborat­ion between Australia and the Biden administra­tion, as well as soil carbon projects.

Australia could also pursue collaborat­ive research and developmen­t on small modular nuclear reactor technologi­es with the UK and the US. The government says the aim is to “catalyse between $3 and $5 of co-investment for every dollar invested”.

Australia’s former chief scientist Alan Finkel is an enthusiast­ic backer of hydrogen. In a statement about the funding for internatio­nal collaborat­ion, Finkel said collaborat­ion with other like-minded countries on developmen­t and deployment of new technologi­es would lower the cost of any transition to net zero emissions and “accelerate their adoption”.

 ?? Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP ?? Scott Morrison visits Star Scientific, a hydrogen research facility on the Central Coast, NSW. Australia is under pressure going into Joe Biden’s climate summit for lack of ambition on climate action.
Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP Scott Morrison visits Star Scientific, a hydrogen research facility on the Central Coast, NSW. Australia is under pressure going into Joe Biden’s climate summit for lack of ambition on climate action.

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