
Greg Hunt is an adult sent on a youth’s errand.
It’s easy to think the opposite. With that boyish appearance, high voice and youthful enthusiasm, the Environment Minister can seem like the work experience kid mistaken for the boss. But Hunt is a seasoned political grown-up: a person who understands that you can’t be too wedded to your ideals if you’re going to make your mark in politics. People throw his master’s thesis on climate change at him as though politicians — or any vaguely intelligent individual — should for a lifetime adhere to the views they held in their early 20s. That’s unfair, and misses the point that Hunt has only done what most politicians who have any chance of actually wielding power have done, which is allow one’s positions to be dictated by political expedience. Moreover, in any event Hunt no longer relies on the ivory towers of academe for his knowledge about climate change, in preference for the greater rigour of Wikipedia.
Take Prime Minister Tony Abbott, for example. Abbott may or may not believe in anthropogenic climate change, but the point is he doesn’t care either way; his positions — and at various times he has held every possible position on climate change and what to do about it except, oddly, the one he ended up adopting as policy — have been dictated by political expediency.
Similarly with former prime minister Kevin Rudd, who insisted climate change was the greatest moral and economic challenge of our time and then offered a feeble scheme to address it, watered it down even further under pressure from lobbyists and then walked away from it entirely. For Rudd, climate change was purely a weapon with which to attack the Coalition, first under John Howard and then Brendan Nelson and Malcolm Turnbull. It worked so well that he broke the Liberals in two. The Liberals promptly turned to Abbott, who repaid the favour in spades to Rudd and then Julia Gillard. Abbott’s ridiculous scare campaign on the carbon price was no more politically amoral than Kevin Rudd’s politicisation of the issue.
So Hunt, by virtue of political expediency, now has to stand at media conferences and advocate climate change measures for which he ought to need several Botox injections in order to maintain a straight face. This week he insisted that his “Direct Action” policy could start straight away, without legislation, an entirely accurate statement insofar as the winner-picking part goes: Direct Action is in essence a giant industry handouts program that can be allocated under existing appropriations without drama.
More problematic is the baseline emissions component, under which — notionally — businesses could be fined for exceeding their baseline emissions — so long as it doesn’t inhibit business growth. Exactly how this dilemma will be resolved is a matter for a White Paper in coming months. You can bet any baseline emissions scheme will be carefully structured to ensure no one but the most egregious polluter risks being fined, but either way, it will need legislation.
“Our youth are entitled to wonder whether … they should take some direct action of their own. Action to shut down the loaders and ports that export coal.”
Direct Action will have little impact on emissions, and certainly far far less than that required to meet Australia’s minimalist bipartisan 5% reduction target, which is why Treasury costs the program much higher than the Coalition will budget for it. Moreover, Hunt’s programs have already been nibbled away at in the Coalition savings program, and will undoubtedly face heavy going in the Expenditure Review Committee between now and the next budget. Hunt’s colleagues know Direct Action is a figleaf for climate inaction, and at several billion dollars it’s a hideously expensive one to maintain.
Hunt’s best hope is that, in the absence of a carbon price, the Australian economy continues to grow below trend and we fail to address the gouging of government-owned electricity companies, whose ongoing price hikes have played a useful role in curbing electricity demand in recent years. In that context, gold-plating and over-engineering have been a longer-lasting, more effective carbon price than the real thing.
In the longer term, however, the planet will continue to warm and our summers will become more extreme. Australia’s world-beating carbon addiction will go on, the first-mover opportunities for investment in renewables will continue to be squandered and the cost of ending Australia’s carbon addiction — which will have to happen at some point in coming decades — will continue, as Treasury has explained, to grow with every delay. Most of all, Australia’s capacity to drive international agreements to stave off very dangerous levels of climate change — levels that will inflict colossal economic damage on Australia by the end of the century — will be undermined.
Climate inaction is thus a direct wealth transfer from our children and their children and subsequent generations to ourselves, in the higher costs of adaptation and reducing the emissions intensity of the Australian economy. It’s a cost we have consciously selected through politicians like Kevin Rudd — who at least had the good grace to admit his mistake — Tony Abbott and Greg Hunt. Business-as-usual politicians convinced their own personal and partisan political ends are more important than the giant rip-off they’re perpetrating on subsequent generations.
What did you do when we could still have stopped it, our grandkids might ask about climate change, to which we can only answer “we took the easy, the expedient, way out. We put mediocrities and clowns like Hunt in charge. We placed the almost negligible cost of abatement action ahead of the massive costs you’re now paying for through higher taxes, more expensive insurance, lower economic growth.”
Sorry, kids, but we squibbed it. Squibbed it when it wasn’t even a hard choice to make for anyone with a basic grasp of maths.
In a world governed by Rudds and Abbotts and Hunts, in which a functional carbon pricing scheme will actually be removed and replaced with a nonsensical scheme even the creators of which know is a joke, our youth are entitled to wonder whether, in the absence of genuine political action, they should take some direct action of their own. Action to shut down the loaders and ports that export coal. Action to shut down coal-fired power plants. Actions to shut down the electricity-greedy industries we prop up, like aluminium smelting. Such action will be expensive, and damaging, and inequitable, and dangerous, but in the absence of real policies from political adults, it’s better than a status quo that will punish our youth as future taxpayers and citizens.
Better than what we adults have been able to manage.

73 thoughts on “Climate policy: when adults squib it, youth should take direct action”
Silver Lining
October 26, 2013 at 5:05 pmBushfires are the least of our problems, although they make great TV. Our crops will fail as temps rise and bees become extinct. What we will we eat then? Coal?
Warren Joffe
October 26, 2013 at 6:08 pm@ Silver Lining
If your are shooting for fame for alarmist predictions based on dubious claims to expertise you should be aware that Prof Tim Flannery is still alive and still talking. Just for warm up though in case you get on the 7.30 report what about telling us which parts of the world will suffer so much that the crops fail and what is the timing for your predictions. Maybe we’ll be inporting things grown in northern Siberia after about 2070. Are you likely to be around to pay up on a bet at that time?
Hamis Hill
October 26, 2013 at 9:12 pmI thought this was all about young people taking things into their own hands on the environment, because no one else will?
Instead it degenerates into the usual idiot fest.
Warren Joffe
October 26, 2013 at 10:22 pm@ Hanis Hill
Out of the mouth of babes, yes, of course. The young may be excused their strong feelings about things they have no more sound reason to believe than the stuff they were told was true by priests, pastors and other assorted gurus. After education at a good university and some time earning a living ignorance and woolly thinking is not so easily excused….
Andrew Dolt
October 27, 2013 at 1:21 amTamas, your “facts” are ignored because they are not facts. They are PRATTs (Points Refuted a Thousand Times). They are things you would like to believe which are not true. You have not read the IPCC Report. You are parroting rubbish from denialist blogs.
Andrew Dolt
October 27, 2013 at 1:41 amWarren Joffe, on what basis do you assign NASA, CSIRO, the Bureau of Metereology, the National Science Academies of many different countries, the Royal Society of London, 97% of climate scientists, etc etc, the same credibility as priests, pastors and other assorted gurus? You scoff at scientists and instead rely on Andrew Bolt the Climate Dolt. I’m not seeing any legs to stand on, Warren, I’m just seeing a dick.
James Wrangler
October 27, 2013 at 11:33 am“Action to shut down coal-fired power plants.” – If they do that how are we suppose to read the absolute dribble you and your fellow leftists write.
Liamj
October 27, 2013 at 3:12 pm@ Warren Joffe – you repeat wind farm myths in most of your posts. If you have some capital gain at risk you should chip in to the Institute for Public Affairs astroturf ‘Australian Environment Foundation’, their antiwind confusionism is available to highest bidder.
Warren Joffe
October 27, 2013 at 4:14 pm@ Andrew Dolt
You remind me of Sheridan’s splendid jibe which included reference to relying on imagination for one’s facts. You extrapolate out of your own preconceptions far beyond anything that I said justified. I merely pointed out that insisting on sticking to the possible wisdom of babes, as HH seemed to advocate, was inherently not soundly based.
Warren Joffe
October 27, 2013 at 4:35 pm@ Liamj
Can you elaborate on “you repeat wind farm myths in most of your posts”? I am not sure what this could be about.
Evident wind farm truths – not myths – would be 1. that few indeed would be built without subsidy or regulation which gave them an advantage over coal and even natural gas because they are one way to achieve renewable targets mandated (in Australia’s case) by political requirements which are fairly obvious so I need not spell out. 2. they cannot be relied on to produce power when most needed though theoretically one might have a whole continent with different winds likely to blow at different times linked up
by a grid which gave some, but not enough, semblance of base power provision. 3. They could, theoretically, be used to pump water for peak load hydro or even for storage in some super capacity batteries but this would already be done somewhere on a large enough scale to give credibility if there was a buck in it rather than the likelihood of loss without taxpayer subsidies which don’t apply or apply in such large measure to existing power generators. 4. They are not, in most people’s judgment aesthetically good for the environment – indeed quite the opposite when, as has happened near Beaufort in Victoria for example, they are built next to heritage sites for which landscape values are important – and capable of having an economic value put on them. This may be the least of the economic arguments. However, they all add up to a serious prima facie case against including wind farms in the mix. Tidal or wave power I have retained a sentiment for but they too, no doubt, fail the test of not making money as efficiently as coal or gas fired generators.
In the end, apart from nuclear power which could have a very long working life ahead of it (and not inconsistent with a modern First World economy if France’s example is representative), the energy of the sun is the answer. That could be said to include wind and wave, though not tidal, but it will be efficient conversion of arriving photons into power, longevity of plant, and efficient storage which solve our problems for hundreds of years to come. (Hydrogen fuel for cars and road transport? Maybe but that probably is secondary to, and dependent on, the basic production of electricity) Yes, I can foresee the day when a third grader will hear “Can you imagine it? All that coal that we now turn into a thousand different carbon based plastics and other liquids and solids use to be burned!!!”)
In the meantime can you defend your case on wind farms?