Australia supports in principle net zero emissions by 2050 - Los Angeles Times
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Australia gives support in principle for net zero carbon emissions by 2050

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce in Parliament
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, left, listens to Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce during a session in Parliament on Thursday.
(Mick Tsikas / AAP)
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Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced Monday that a fifth minister from the government’s junior coalition partner, the Nationals, will join his Cabinet as part of a deal to cement the smaller party’s support for a national target of zero net carbon emissions by 2050.

Support in principle by the Nationals for the target, which was decided Sunday, is a breakthrough for Morrison, who wants to take a more ambitious plan to reduce Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions when he leaves Thursday for the United Nations summit on climate change in Glasgow, Scotland.

Lawmakers with the Nationals would not discuss the conditions the party had placed on its support. Morrison’s Cabinet was considering the conditions.

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Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce, who is also deputy prime minister, declined to say whether he had demanded that Resources Minister Keith Pitt be made the party’s fifth Cabinet minister.

Morrison later said Pitt, who maintains that Australia will continue mining coal for decades, would join his Cabinet.

“Minister Pitt is a powerful voice for the resources sector and ensuring that we build upon Australia’s strength in traditional exports, while harnessing opportunities in the new-energy economy and critical minerals,†Morrison said.

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Deadly fires in recent years have heightened concerns in California about the impacts of climate change. The same shift is happening in Australia.

Morrison later told Parliament he looked forward to outlining in Glasgow “our commitments in terms of 2050,†as well as an existing 2030 commitment to reduce emissions by 26% to 28% below 2005 levels.

Morrison said the center-left opposition Labor Party’s promise to reduce emissions by 45% by 2030 had cost the party the 2019 election.

“The Australian people rejected Labor’s policies because Labor couldn’t explain their policies. They had no plan to achieve their policies. They couldn’t say what they’d cost,†Morrison told Parliament.

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Morrison declined to explain how his government plans to achieve its new 2050 target or detail the agreement with the Nationals.

A U.N.-backed study says the world must cut its production of coal, oil and gas by more than half in the coming decade to hit global warming targets.

Labor accused Morrison of adopting its 2019 election promise of net zero by 2050. Joyce declined to confirm or deny that he had told his colleagues he opposed that goal.

“We never would have had to go into the negotiation process if the Nationals were 100% happy with where the proposition was,†Joyce said.

Nationals deputy leader David Littleproud said further details of the agreement would be made public by early Tuesday.

“We worked through this calmly and rationally as a party,†Littleproud said, adding that the Nationals’ amendments to the Cabinet proposal would protect jobs in rural Australia.

U.S. climate envoy John Kerry says he thinks ‘enormous progress’ can be made at upcoming U.N. climate talks in Scotland.

Reducing emissions is a politically fraught issue in Australia, which is one of the world’s largest exporters of coal and liquefied natural gas. The nation is also one of the world’s worst greenhouse gas emitters per capita because of its heavy reliance on coal-fired power.

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The rural-based Nationals have traditionally represented farmers’ interests, but are increasingly now seen as advocates for fossil-fuel industries.

Nationals Sen. Matt Canavan, who represents coal-rich Queensland state, said the deal was bad for the country.

“Net zero is going to end in tears,†Canavan said.

“I don’t think this is the right approach for this country. It’s a fantasy to think we can remove all carbon emissions,†Canavan added.

Australia has not budged from its 2015 pledge at a Paris climate summit for 2030, despite many countries adopting far more ambitious targets.

The Glasgow summit, known as COP26, will assess progress since nations agreed in the Paris accord to limit warming to less than 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit). The meeting in Glasgow is widely seen as the last chance to hold global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels.

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