Townsville Bulletin

Right climate for jobs

Labor’s climate spokesman Chris Bowen is rebuilding the party’s climate policy around jobs, writes

- Joe Hildebrand

THE Australian Labor Party has placed blue-collar workers front and centre of its reposition­ing on climate change and says focus needs to shift from “esoteric” internatio­nal politics to local jobs and the Australian national interest.

In a landmark speech, obtained by News Corp Australia, Labor’s climate spokesman Chris Bowen has recast the party’s position on climate action as one dedicated to boosting Australian jobs and the economy. “The internatio­nal politics of climate can sometimes get a little esoteric and feel detached from people’s lives,” Mr Bowen will say.

“When you’re busy getting food on the table, making sure the kids are doing their homework, or trying to pay off a mortgage with stagnant wages, COP26 is probably not what’s keeping you up at night. We must bring the arguments in favour of climate action back to why it’s in the best interests of Australian­s.”

The speech will be used to launch the Australia Institute’s Climate of the Nation 2021 Benchmark Report on Wednesday. It comes as Labor continues to rebuild its climate policy following its bruising election loss in 2019, where former leader Bill Shorten struggled to outline the cost of the party’s climate policy and gave mixed messages about the Adani coal mine.

“We must relentless­ly prosecute the case that action on climate change is not only an internatio­nal obligation, it is also an imperative for our national economic interest,” Mr Bowen will say.

“As our opponents run scare campaigns about the economic cost of climate action, we must point out that good climate policy actually creates jobs and cuts power bills. The world’s climate emergency is Australia’s jobs opportunit­y.”

Labor’s renewed focus on economic outcomes rather than environmen­tal outcomes — and regional areas rather than the inner-city — also follows outspoken concerns from senior figures such as Joel Fitzgibbon that the party was losing touch with its bluecollar base. Mr Bowen was at pains to focus on regional and working-class areas in his speech today.

“Australian­s know that acting on climate change is both an environmen­tal imperative and an economic opportunit­y,” Mr Bowen will say. “The top location for rooftop solar uptake in NSW isn’t Double Bay, it’s Dubbo.

“In Sydney, it’s not Mosman, its Marsden Park. In Queensland, it’s not Brisbane, it’s Bundaberg.”

Mr Bowen cited the billion dollar hydrogen manufactur­ing facility in Gladstone and the offshore wind projects expected to provide thousands of jobs off the coast from traditiona­l energy hubs of the La Trobe Valley, the Hunter and Central Queensland.

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