
Alarmingly 鈥 but not surprisingly 鈥 2023 was the hottest year since 1850, when records were begun.
The European Commission鈥檚聽 said every day of last year was more than 1掳C warmer compared to the pre-industrial period: 2023 as the warmest year on record.
It predicts that the year ending in February 2024 will exceed 1.5掳C above the pre-industrial level.
If this is the case, the 2016 Paris Agreement has well and truly failed: its goal was to聽
The world is now entering a dangerous new period and, as we well know, no country is immune from the climate catastrophes that accompany global warming.
The mainstream media鈥檚 reporting, however, implies that Australia is on top of this existential challenge.
And with billionaire mining magnate now on board the renewables train, we鈥檝e got it, right?
Australia鈥檚 second-richest person has now 鈥済one green鈥: he is even campaigning against Woodside鈥檚 controversial Scarborough gas project, including of engaging in a 鈥渇urious race to destroy the planet鈥 for profit.
But Forrest is no climate hero.
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His relationship breakdown with oil and gas giant Woodside should not blind us to the fact that he is positioning himself for more government support as his Fortescue Metals Group (FMG) 鈥渄iversifies鈥 to become a green energy powerhouse. FMG, worth $82.4 billion, made its wealth mining iron ore in the Pilbara, primarily for export.
Climate minister Chris Bowen was there with Forrest as he announced his new wind energy project in western New South Wales in early January.
is evident: it gave it $13.7 million for a green hydrogen project in 2022 and the Coalition was .
The major parties agree that taxpayers should subsidise mining and fossil energy projects.
estimated last year that fossil fuel subsidies amounted to a record-breaking $57.1 billion (up from the $55.3 billion in 2022).
Shamefully, the sums are 14 times the amount the government invests in the , which was created as part of the government鈥檚 greenwashing, but which needs to become real given the damage caused by erratic weather events.
Australia鈥檚 focus on 鈥渕itigation鈥 and private green energy, rather than a planned phase-out of fossil energy including upscaling the grid, is another part of the problem.
The believes that Australia鈥檚 (privatised) boom in rooftop solar is holding back the country鈥檚 green energy growth.
It said the country is being held back by the 鈥渓ack of new federal incentives鈥 and that the expansion of clean energy is 鈥渓agging the tripling of capacity by 2030 that was agreed at the COP28 climate summit in December鈥.
, epitomised by its final text urging only a 鈥済o slow鈥, not a 鈥減hase-out鈥 of fossil fuels, seems to have emboldened Bowen to limit Labor to handing the energy transition, such as it is, to private corporations like FMG.
This underscores Australia鈥檚 failure to plan the transition to renewables, despite an abundance of wind, solar and geothermal energy sources.
It also wrongly suggests that governments don鈥檛 have to lead on climate energy policy.
Labor is not only failing us, it is endangering the peoples of the Global South 鈥斅爄ncluding our closest vulnerable neighbours in the Pacific 鈥 who pay the highest price for global warming.
Australia signed on to the COP28聽pledge in Dubai to boost renewable energy capacity three-fold by 2030 and double energy efficiency improvements.
But the privatised nature of any such shift means that public infrastructure has not kept up: the energy grid 鈥 still in public hands 鈥 is not fit for purpose.
Energy consultants self-servingly argue that this points to the need for more privatisation to deal with the grid problem, when the opposite is true.
As energy is an essential service, the shift to renewable energy 鈥 which will have to happen 鈥 would be more easily done in public hands.
China is an example: it delivered as much solar capacity last year as the rest of the world did in 2022.
According to the IEA, for almost 60% of renewable generation worldwide by 2028. As a result, its demand for coal is expected to fall this year and plateau through to 2026.
Meanwhile, Labor is contemplating .
If you, like us, believe that 2024 has to be the year to act on the climate emergency, became a and .听