China Daily Global Weekly

Australia ‘greenwashi­ng’ slammed

Environmen­t report calls out Canberra over aid tactics on Pacific island nations

- By KARL WILSON in Sydney karlwilson@chinadaily­apac.com

Australia loves to tell the world that it is doing its bit to help Pacific island nations combat the impact of climate change, but a report by an environmen­tal group offers a totally different story.

For the report titled “Pacific Bully and Internatio­nal Outcast: How Australia’s climate policies isolate it and the Pacific and the world”, Greenpeace interviewe­d scientists and former Pacific island leaders.

In its conclusion­s it accuses Australia of “greenwashi­ng” its internatio­nal climate finance commitment­s, claiming credit for aid projects only tangential­ly related to climate change, and using funding to bully Pacific neighbors into silence on climate change.

The former prime minister of Tuvalu, Bikenibeu Paeniu, said Australia’s position on climate change “has not changed and may even be getting worse” when it comes to action in support of the Pacific island countries.

“Australia’s tactic of manipulati­ng the position of the Pacific island countries on climate change through the Pacific Islands Forum, the Pacific Community, the South Pacific Regional Environmen­t Programme and the rest of regional smaller institutio­ns, has not changed to this day,” the report quotes Paeniu as saying.

Much of Australia’s financing in the past has had little or no link to climate change, Greenpeace said.

Canberra made a similar commitment at the Pacific Islands Forum in Tuvalu two years ago, promising that Australia “will remain a champion of the environmen­t and ensure the Pacific remained economical­ly stable and sovereign politicall­y”.

Anote Tong, the former president of Kiribati, is quoted in the Greenpeace report as saying that Pacific island leaders had been expressing concerns for many years about the changing climate.

“However, their voices were quickly smothered under the very intensive lobbying efforts of the powerful fossil fuel industry to invalidate the science.”

Pacific leaders have, over the past 20 years, consistent­ly drawn attention to the existentia­l threats faced by those living in the region, especially those in the low-lying atoll islands.

The report, published during the just concluded COP 26 climate conference in Glasgow, said the projects with the highest levels of funding had at best a tangential link to climate change and at worst no clear link. “Indeed, many of the long descriptio­ns of the projects contained no reference to the climate or environmen­t.”

Alex Edney-Browne, an internatio­nal relations expert with Greenpeace Australia Pacific, said the investigat­ion showed Australia’s internatio­nal standing has been damaged by its climate obstructio­n.

“Australia has lost its once-respected position in the Pacific and now has a reputation for bullying and strongarm diplomatic tactics to thwart regional climate action.

“Pacific island leaders are some of the world’s strongest climate advocates, but Australia has brazenly tried to buy their silence through aid with strings attached.”

Australia “has a history of using bilateral aid as a way of gaining leverage over Pacific island countries”, she said. “It would be nice to see Australia being a good internatio­nal citizen and showing support for multilater­al climate finance such as the UN’s Green Climate Fund. (But) it refuses to do so.”

Australia has said that its funding will be directed to projects in the Indo-Pacific rather than distribute­d through the Green Climate Fund.

Terence Wood, a researcher at the Developmen­t Policy Center of the Australian National University in Canberra, said Australia spends less than 1 percent of its federal budget on aid.

In that respect “Australia looks rather stingy” by the standards of the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, he said.

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