The Guardian (USA)

Labor urged to axe $1.9bn in ‘zombie’ fossil fuel subsidies promised by the Coalition

- Adam Morton and Rafqa Touma

Labor is being urged to axe nearly $2bn in handouts to fossil fuel developmen­ts that the Parliament­ary Budget Office found were promised under the Coalition but have not been contracted.

The PBO analysis, commission­ed by the Greens, found the Morrison government announced $1.93bn in support for coal and gas developmen­ts that had not been formally committed.

The Greens leader, Adam Bandt, called on the government to cancel what he called “zombie fossil fuel subsidies” and reallocate the funding to renewable investment­s in next month’s budget.

“Public money should not fund coal and gas,” he said. “If money is as tight as the treasurer says it is, then Morrisoner­a

handouts to coal and gas should be the first to get the chop.”

Most of the pledges were part of what the Morrison government said would be a “gas-fired recovery” from the pandemic. Many were for developmen­ts in the Northern Territory.

They included $300m for liquified natural gas exports; $200m for an industrial developmen­t at Darwin’s Middle Arm that would involve petrochemi­cal and hydrogen production, minerals processing and carbon capture and storage (CCS); $172.6m for “gas industry roads upgrades”; and $23.1m for drilling grants to access gas in the Beetaloo Basin.

Nationally, there was $270.2m for “clean” hydrogen developmen­t, which includes hydrogen made with gas, $262.1m for carbon capture projects and $547.2m for the commercial­isation of “low emissions internatio­nal technology partnershi­ps”.

There was also $59.5m for the Cooper and Adavale gas basins in outback Queensland and South Australia, and $50.4m for future gas infrastruc­ture investment.

Contracts had been signed for $793m, including $600m for a gas power plant to be operated by Snowy Hydro at Kurri Kurri.

Shani Tager, a senior campaigner with 350.org who led an earlier review of outstandin­g Coalition fossil fuel subsidies, said the analysis had vindicated her organisati­on’s work.

“It shows [the Coalition] were big on announceme­nts, but not big on follow through, which is good news really,” she said. “It means there is an opportunit­y for these projects to be stopped.”

Asked at a press conference on Tuesday whether the spending announceme­nts could be cut, the finance minister, Katy Gallagher, said: “You’ll have to wait and see”.

A government spokespers­on said: “We’re going through the budget line by line to ensure that investment­s deliver value for taxpayers.”

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The resources minister, Madeleine King, has previously supported Labor maintainin­g funding for the Middle Arm precinct, but told the NT News it was being audited as part of the budget process. She has also supported opening up new gas fields “subject to independen­t scientific assessment­s and effective environmen­tal regulation”.

The opposition said it expected Labor to keep the Coalition funding announceme­nts, which it called “critical nation building commitment­s”. Its climate change and energy spokespers­on, Ted O’Brien, said many of the projects had been “designed to support the commercial­isation of lowemissio­ns technologi­es, boost energy supply, fortify our energy security and put downward pressure on power prices”.

“The Greens have no regard for regional Australia nor the traditiona­l industries that many Australian­s rely on and have long been central to Australia’s

competitiv­e advantage,” O’Brien said.

Gas is a fossil fuel that has often been described as having about the emissions of coal when burned for energy, but studies have found this underestim­ates its impact on the climate.

The head of the Internatio­nal Energy Agency last year backed scientific warnings that no new gas fields could be developed if the world was to limit global heating to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels. The UN secretary general, António Guterres, has made the same argument. In June, he said fossil fuel companies and the banks that finance them “have humanity by the throat”.

 ?? ?? A gas exploratio­n well in the Beetaloo Basin in the Northern Territory. Subsidies announced by the Coalition include $23.1m for drilling grants to access gas in the region. Photograph: Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources
A gas exploratio­n well in the Beetaloo Basin in the Northern Territory. Subsidies announced by the Coalition include $23.1m for drilling grants to access gas in the region. Photograph: Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources

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