In the end, it was Tony Abbott who got shirt-fronted, and not by the kleptocrat thug who runs Russia, but by Barack Obama — a leader with whom, pundits have assured us, Abbott is developing an increasingly close relationship. Evidently not close enough for the American President to give Abbott the heads-up on his pending climate action deal with Chinese autocrat Xi Jinping.
Then again, why would he? Abbott takes pride in his dismantling of a working carbon pricing scheme and his efforts to wreck investment in renewables, using his ever-shrinking Direct Action policy as a cover for climate denialism and a reflexive support for transnational resource companies. Abbott has nothing to offer countries genuinely interested in preventing the huge economic cost of climate change in coming decades, beyond a clear example of what not to do and asinine platitudes about how wonderful coal is.
The impact of the announcement could be understood through the reaction to it. The Minerals Council bravely declared that it was good news for Australian coal because our coal is so clean — just ask the residents of Morwell — and would be cleaner still with carbon capture. That’s the Alice in Wonderland technology that requires years of massive R&D investment before it’s clear whether it will even work outside a lab (and remember, spending taxpayer money on carbon capture research is “innovative R&D”; public investment in proven renewables technologies is “wasteful subsidisation”). But at denialism’s in-house newsletter, The Australian, Greg Sheridan was desperately insisting the climate deal “won’t change a thing” and it’s only “climate hysterics” who think otherwise.
With Abbott desperate to keep climate off the G20 agenda (because it’s not an economic issue … an even more bizarre form of denialism than claiming climate change doesn’t exist), the announcement couldn’t have come at a worse time for him. The Coalition’s entire post-Malcolm Turnbull strategy on climate action has been based on an assumption that there would be no concerted international action on the issue, especially by the biggest economies. That would allow Australia, with its risible bipartisan target of a 5% emissions reduction by 2020, to escape serious scrutiny (indeed, our emissions have now started rising again after a period of decline). As Treasury stated in 2010, the government’s Direct Action policy won’t even achieve that 5% at its then-budgeted allocation — which has since shrunk considerably. But Abbott has said there won’t be any more money allocated to it even if it falls short.
Whatever implausible hopes the government has that Direct Action will be enough turn to pure fantasy given that Australia now has no excuse not to lift its emissions reduction target from 5% to 15% or higher in the wake of international action. That’s why the Obama-Xi agreement is so damaging: it leaves the Coalition with no place to hide on an issue where it has long wanted to have it both ways — to behave like the denialists and resource company advocates they are but pretend to want to address climate change so as not to lose mainstream voters.
Coming after Abbott so visibly failed to follow through with his rhetoric of aggression toward Putin — he “shirked the shirt-front”, as one TV news bulletin put it — the deal means the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation summit has been a wretched experience for Abbott. Former prime minister John Howard famously had a terrible APEC in Sydney in 2007, for different reasons; maybe it’s political karma for all those years in the early 1990s when the Coalition bagged APEC as one of Labor’s grand follies.
The government will now attempt to switch attention to its own deal with China, the free trade agreement it is desperate to finalise for Xi’s visit to Canberra on Monday, with the fallback option of signing an agreement on the finalised areas while negotiations on the harder issues continue. These bilateral free trade agreements have been proven to add little to the economy and if anything merely delay much-needed liberalisation here so it can be used as a bargaining chip by the economic illiterates of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. Still, the governments like to make a big deal of them and after this week, it will take anything it can to appear internationally credible.


51 thoughts on “Xi-Obama deal leaves Abbott with nowhere to hide on climate”
John Allan
November 13, 2014 at 7:07 pmAs always, follow the money ….. Murdoch, Gina etc are pulling the strings.
Tyger Tyger
November 13, 2014 at 8:42 pmBeautifully written piece, Bernard. Concise and laced with well-tempered and well-deserved vitriol for a leader and a party who are no longer simply on the wrong side of history, but, as of now, have been left behind by it. Thank you.
Tyger Tyger
November 13, 2014 at 9:05 pm@13, Gillard’s mistake was in being a woman. That fat-headed fool you adore – who looks more and more like the nerve-ridden, sweating Blakey from On the Buses (without the moustache) every time I see him, particularly on the “international stage” – has broken more promises in one year than Rudd and Gillard have in their lives, let alone in office. The man’s a congenital liar. He freely admitted to lying whenever it’s not written down and every time I see him on television he’s sans pen and paper, so clearly he just makes it up on the spot.
He’s a liar. He said so and has since amply demonstrated the fact.
Yet the media which treated Gillard’s one “lie” – or political compromise, depending on how adult you are – as the most heinous act any politician ever committed (LYING FOR FUCK’S SAKE! When had a politician ever done THAT before?!), blithely ignores the coalition’s complete overturning of the platform on which it ran and its replacement with a contempt-filled “Nyah! Nyah! Nyah!”
Just how fucking stupid do you think we are, @13? We heard everything Abbott and his moronic minions had to say in the election campaign and, despite their emphasising Gillard’s questionable honesty throughout, they’ve treated those promises and the people they made them to with the contempt only the born-to-rule can summon. All of this is merely in addition to their being climate barbarians.
Worst. Government. Ever.
No contest.
Quite an achievement in just on a year.
Honest Johnny
November 13, 2014 at 9:07 pmAbbott should have been there too. He might have learned what a decent red wine tastes like. I won a bottle of red signed by Tony Abbott in a hamper. It was a shocker. Couldn’t even use it in the stew.
drsmithy
November 13, 2014 at 9:28 pmThe carbon tax was a massive broken election promise – a gift handed to Tony Abbott by a deal making Gillard.
It’s amazing that conservatives still dwell on what was, in reality, little more than an issue of semantics, in the face of the smorgasboard of dishonesty from the current Government.
BSA Bob
November 13, 2014 at 9:34 pmThat #13 post’s pretty funny. The strategy now will be to muddy the waters. And LOTS of distractions.
Ken Lambert
November 14, 2014 at 12:54 amObama won’t be there and the Chinese need to clean up air pollution…..the USA is reducing emissions by fracking gas boys and girls.
If renewables can be competitive (battery storage or other competitive storage is the key) in a carbon based energy economy without subsidies, and the technical progress on energy efficiency continues, emissions will fall naturally without any special targets….possibly more than the Obama targets in any case.
There are even Americans who know this, and I’m sure that the Chinese have done their sums too so that no damage is done to their economy; binding they ain’t anyway for a one party state without any enforceable legal system.
Anyway Tamas is right as usual and if the putatively reduced warming imbalance keeps going into the oceans, then the putative problem will poncify like a Paul Erhlich prediction.
AR
November 14, 2014 at 8:00 amFing ’bout reality is that, deny (hi Tamas!), lie, obfuscate (hi OneHand!) and ignore up hill & down dale, it will bite the bum, sooner rather than later.
Dogs breakfast
November 14, 2014 at 10:26 amGillard’s ‘lie’ versus John Howard’s ‘non-core’ promises. There’s certainly a different perspective on these things.
As for Tony Abbott’s consistency, well that is completely overlooked in comparison.
But Gillard, well, she was just another lying woman, wasn’t she.
The double standard, and you can’t convine me that it had nothing to do with her gender, is astounding.
As for current policy, the real long term cost is the foregone opportunities in renewables where Australia is a leader.
I’m just not sure why renewables have to be able to produce power at comparable prices with no subsidies, while fossil fuels continue the subsidy race to the bottom, and somehow we are supposed to think this is a level playing field.
Geoff Thomas
November 14, 2014 at 12:01 pmThe UK Treasury commissioned Nicholas Stern to write a review of the economic implications of climate change, for the United Kingdom and globally. In Australia, Ross Garnaut was commissioned to do a similar review by the ACT Government.
These are economic policy reviews, not reviews of the environmental science of climate change.
Whether you agree or disagree with this science, Stern and Garnaut argue that it is beyond reasonable doubt that the rate of climate change will accelerate. This will not just affect the global environment. It will have serious and lasting economic implications for developing and developed nations alike.
The other point that is central in both the Stern and Garnaut reviews is that the benefits of acting early to address the political, economic and social challenges of climate change exceed the cost of such early action.
From this it follows that as a world community we are beyond the point where we can do nothing. And it is in this context that the agreement between the US and China is of great importance.
The Chinese have recognised that their challenge is to reduce the level of their carbon emissions at the same time as the Chinese people enjoy the benefits of a growing and reforming economy. In the US, California and other states have recognised the challenge. Now there is a national recognition.
The Abbott Government must accept that it risks being left behind. The policy challenge for them is to recognise that their inaction will seriously damage the very industries they seek to insulate from the imminent seismic changes in commodities markets.
They can no longer expect the taxpayer to bankroll big emitters through the so called Direct Action Plan. They must now accept that carbon emissions are a market failure, and that this should be paid for by those deriving economic benefit from the emissions.
The point of an emissions trading scheme was to derive a revenue stream, funded by the emitters, to pay for measures aimed at managing and mitigating the transition from a carbon economy. Down the track this will involve assistance for individuals and industries affected by the structural adjustments required for the transition to a low carbon economy.
This is the very simple reason why the Abbott Government must change direction and not make taxpayers foot the bill. The buck should rest with the large emitters, who will doubtless be seeking corporate welfare when the day of reckoning arrives.