GREENS SLAM LABOR FOR BACKFLIPPING ON GAS AND SUPPORTING MORE CLIMATE-DESTROYING FOSSIL FUELS

The Greens have slammed the Victorian Labor government for encouraging more fossil fuels in the middle of a climate crisis as Labor plots more offshore gas projects in Victoria and backflips on their plans to phase out dangerous gas cooktops in homes.

It follows reports today that reveal that the Premier has excluded electrifying existing gas cooktops from Victoria’s net zero road map and has signalled new laws to encourage more offshore gas projects. 

The Victorian Greens have labelled this move as another cowardly political decision that denies basic climate science and exposes kids to more asthma-causing gas fumes in homes.

Gas cooktops are not only terrible for the climate, they’re expensive and they lead to complex health issues including childhood asthma. 

The Leader of the Victorian Greens, Ellen Sandell says that the Premier is denying climate science and blowing up any ambition that this government had of tackling the climate crisis. 

Leader of the Victorian Greens, Ellen Sandell: 

“How disappointing that the Labor Premier is giving in to the fossil fuel gas corporations and their lobby groups yet again. This is a cowardly, political decision that denies basic climate science.

“We’re in the middle of a climate crisis caused by burning fossil fuels, yet Labor wants to pour more fuel on the fire and encourage more offshore gas projects in Victoria. 

“Just last month we recorded the world’s hottest day. In a time when countries across the world are trying to speed up their pathway to net zero, the Labor Premier is winding Victoria’s back. 

“We’ve seen backflip after backflip from this Labor government. Instead of listening to climate science and the experts, Labor is pandering to the ring-wing conservatives and fossil fuel lobby groups.

“We don’t need any new gas, Australia already exports far more than we’d ever need. It’s expensive and destroys the climate. We should be focussing on supporting people to move to electric cooking and heating, which works just as well and is a lot cheaper and cleaner.”

New electric vehicles join City Services fleet in time for World EV Day

Today is World EV Day, and you will see more ACT Government electric vehicles out and about.

Five new electric vehicles including a ute, two tipper trucks, one litter picking truck and a delivery van have recently joined the commercial fleet for trial within City Services to continue to provide essential services while cutting emissions. An additional four electric passenger vehicles have also joined the fleet.

These electric vehicles are assisting in everyday city maintenance activities. They may be spotted around the city assisting teams in getting mowing fleet and operators to site, cleaning shops and roadsides of litter and assisting the crews undertaking horticultural maintenance including pruning, mulching, collecting fallen branches and physical weed removal in urban open space.

Our maintenance crews are also using electric vehicles to support our street sweeping efforts and to scrub grime from footpaths. This helps reduce the need for pressure washing surfaces outside of the autumn leaf season.

One of the benefits of using electric vehicles to maintain our public spaces is that they produce less noise so they can be used in more locations early in the morning without disturbing nearby residents, improving overall efficiency.

There are 27 electric vehicle charging units across various ACT Government depots and sites to keep the fleet of electric vehicles active and ready for service.

The vehicle trials have been funded through the ACT Government’s Social Cost of Carbon Fund and Zero Emission Government Fund.

Minister for Water, Energy and Emissions Reduction Shane Rattenbury:

“The ACT is a national leader in climate change and energy initiatives. To continue our leadership, we’re working towards a target of net zero emissions from ACT Government operations by 2040.

“We are making good progress towards our target of a zero-emissions vehicle fleet, with over 220 electric vehicles in the ACT Government fleet. Making this transition will help reduce transport emissions, which is by far the largest source in the Territory accounting for more than 60 percent of the ACT’s emissions.

“As the ACT continues on our pathway to electrification and net zero emissions in the Territory by 2045, it’s exciting to roll out a variety of electric vehicles and show that increasingly there are electric alternatives for any job. 

“Electric vehicles are growing in popularity and availability throughout the Territory, offering more opportunities for industry and community. I look forward to seeing more vehicles in a range of categories rolled out across our fleet in the future.”

For more information about World EV Day visit www.worldevday.org/.

*Quotes from Labor Ministers have been removed from the original ACT Government media release at their request

$29.7 billion per year by 2030: Confusion, overlaps and gaps in NSW invasive species plan

The cost of failing to effectively manage invasive species in NSW could be blown out by 15 times in the next 6 years unless major reforms are made. This would increase the annual economic impacts from invasive species in NSW from $1.9 billion up to $29.7 billion in a worse case scenario by the year 2030.

A preliminary report into the NSW Invasive Species Plan, by the Natural Resources Commission has found widespread dysfunction with how the State is handling the threats of invasive species. The report included 33 key findings and 71 recommendations that the Government must act on to prevent an explosion in impacts from invasive species.

Preliminary Report and Government media release

Greens MP and spokesperson for the environment Sue Higginson said “The urgency of this situation couldn’t be any clearer, the Government must take immediate steps without waiting longer for a whole of Government response,”

“Just as we have seen with other urgent issues, I’m genuinely concerned that the Government wants to process this report in their own time. The reality is that the environment cannot be expected to wait while the Minns Labor Government figures out what parts of this report are politically convenient for them.”

“The NSW Invasive Species Plan is not the problem, rather it is unsupported through the system with a lack of strategic, risk based prioritisation, and inconsistent leadership and coordination of cross-tenure programs,”

“The Minns Government has repeatedly compromised the environment for the sake of industry and politics, but this report lays bare just how dysfunctional it has been allowed to become. The fact that invasive species management is only seen through a lens of primary production drastically underestimates the real value of healthy environments, and will cause both industry and the environment to suffer in the near term,”

“The high profile reintroduction of aerial shooting of horses in the Kosciuszko National Park is a necessary and important program, and we can only hope it’s come soon enough to prevent the extinction of those threatened species at direct risk of extinction from feral horses. However, programs can not operate in isolation from other critical actions that must be taken to prevent native species extinctions at the hands of introduced feral species,”

“We are seeing right now, in Northern NSW with the Red Fire Ant incursion, just how much of a risk invasive species pose. Once these species become established, and without proper care for the whole of system needs, NSW is already on a trajectory of seeing our environment and primary production decimated. This is a wake-up call, and Premier Minns needs to hear it from his comfortable urban electorate,” Ms Higginson said.

Findings of the Royal Commission on Defence and Veteran Suicide shows a dire need for cultural change and oversight in Defence

The Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide has handed down its Final Report documenting deep cultural issues within Defence and the devastating impact this has on veterans and their families.

The Report uncovered that an average of 78 serving or ex-serving ADF members have died by suicide each year for the past 10 years, around three deaths every fortnight.

The report noted that the ADF’s “code of silence” and “military values” are associated both directly and indirectly with suicide risk in the Australian Defence Force, and that Defence leadership must be held accountable for this broken culture.

The Royal Commission’s findings make a stark case for systemic cultural change within the ADF and the systems set up to deal with the inevitable traumas that arise from serving in the military. Defence leadership must own up to the deep structural problems identified in the Royal Commission.

The one indispensable recommendation that the government must accept today is to have a stand-alone statutory entity that oversees and drives the system-wide reform that this Royal Commission has called for.

Senator David Shoebridge Greens Spokesperson for Defence and Veterans Affairs said: “With nearly 6,000 submissions to the Commission and 900 private sessions, this is a once-in-a-generation report that must not just gather dust.”

“There have been dozens of reports and hundreds of recommendations on Defence culture before now and nothing material has changed. Each time the Defence has struck back to squash reform.

“The one non-negotiable recommendation that must be implemented is for a stand-alone statutory entity that oversees and drives the system-wide reform that this report calls for.

“Veterans give their service to the country which often comes at incredible personal cost through injury and trauma. What this report shows is that service injuries are then aggravated by a veteran’s support scheme that does not treat them fairly.

“The report found that survivors of abuse, especially sexual abuse, face ongoing trauma from a broken military culture that obstructs justice and denies accountability.

“These issues ripple across society, particularly for families of veterans. After losing loved ones, or dealing with the fallout of a cruel system, families have then had to navigate an often cold and careless system.

“It is a testament to veterans and their families that while enduring this system they also secured the Royal Commission. We owe it to them, and the loved ones they have lost, to implement these reforms.”

Statement from the Lib Federal Secretariat

The Federal Executive of the Liberal Party has requested that the New South Wales Division appoint three eminent Australians as a committee of management to replace its State Executive.

This follows a report given to the Federal Executive by Mr Brian Loughnane AO relating to the New South Wales Division’s failure to nominate candidates for local government elections and the preparedness of the Division to fight the upcoming federal election.

The Federal Executive has recommended a committee of the Hon Alan Stockdale AO, the Hon Rob Stokes, and the Hon Richard Alston AO be appointed for a period of 10 months.

The New South Wales Division has been asked to comply with this request by next Thursday.

We owe it to our thousands of members in the state to address the challenges within the organisational wing of the NSW Division. More importantly, we owe it to the millions of Australians who are relying on the Liberal Party to return Australia to good government after the next election to get our house in order.

Consul-General in Surabaya

Today I announce the appointment of Mr Glen Askew as Australia’s next Consul-General in Surabaya.

Indonesia is one of Australia’s closest and most important partners. We are deepening our cooperation under our Comprehensive Strategic Partnership to keep our region safe, grow our economies and transition to net zero.

Surabaya is Indonesia’s second largest city, with Central and East Java contributing almost one-third of national GDP and comprising a combined population of over 70 million people.

The Consulate-General in Surabaya is working to strengthen two-way trade and investment by implementing initiatives under Invested: Australia’s Southeast Asia Economic Strategy to 2040, as well expanding people-to-people ties in a powerhouse region of Indonesia.

The Consulate-General also provides services to Australians in Surabaya, including consular assistance.

Mr Askew is a career officer with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and was most recently Assistant Director, Israel-Gaza Taskforce.

He has previously served overseas in Papua New Guinea, Ghana and Indonesia and was a Peacekeeper with Operation Uphold Democracy in Haiti and the United Nations Mission of Support in East Timor (UNMISET) with the Australian Federal Police/United Nations.

I thank former Consul-General Fiona Hoggart for her contributions to advancing Australia’s interests in Surabaya since 2022.

Ambassador to the Organization of American States

Today I announce the appointment of Mr Jason Robertson as Australia’s Ambassador to the Organization of American States (OAS).

The OAS is the pre-eminent regional organisation in the Americas, with 34 Members and 75 Permanent Observers. It has four pillars: democracy promotion; human rights protection; security; and development.

Australia’s Permanent Observer status at the OAS, and the designation of our first Ambassador to the organisation, demonstrates our commitment to stronger engagement with the Americas on shared priorities.

These include support for strong interregional and multilateral rules and norms, promotion of human rights and cooperation on transnational crime.

Mr Robertson is a senior career officer with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and is currently Deputy Head of Mission at the Australian Embassy in Washington DC.

Mr Robertson has previously served as Deputy Head of Mission at the Australian Embassy in Beijing and as Consul-General in Guangzhou. He has had earlier postings to Australian diplomatic missions in Beijing, Islamabad and Belgrade and served in Sarajevo, Pristina and New York with the United Nations Department of Peacekeeping Operations.

Appointment of Ambassador and Consul-General

Today I announce the appointment of highly qualified individuals to lead Australia’s diplomatic post in Surabaya and our representation to the Organization of American States (OAS).

Australia’s diplomats drive our engagement with the world, build influence, create opportunities, support Australians overseas and promote our national interests.

I am pleased to announce the following appointments:

I thank outgoing Consul-General Fiona Hoggart for protecting and promoting Australia’s interests in Surabaya since 2022.

CARE ABOUT COST OF LIVING? FREEZE RENTS

Today ACT Greens MLA Jo Clay has introduced a bill to help defend Canberra’s renters against the housing crisis, by putting a two-year freeze on rent increases  and imposing strict limits on rent increases in the long term. 

“It’s about time renters got a fair go in the ACT. For too long the returns of property investors have been prioritised by the government over the right of all Canberrans to a home,” said Jo Clay MLA.

“With the balance of power in the Legislative Assembly, the Greens have already helped to deliver nation-leading renters’ rights, under the leadership of Attorney General Shane Rattenbury.

“The housing market is cooked. More than 30 percent of Canberrans rent, and many are struggling to pay the rent week to week. They face terrible uncertainty. Many are worried and they can’t   afford to pay.

“For the average Canberran, less than one percent of rentals on the market are affordable.

“In the current inequality crisis, we must now take the next step and recognise the unequal burden of the ‘cost of living’ on renters.”

The Greens’ bill will introduce a two-year freeze on rent increases, impose a two percent limit on increases after those two years, and close loopholes that currently allow landlords to lift rents higher than this limit.

“If the Liberals and Labor are genuine about wanting to tackle the inequality crisis and relieve cost of living pressures, addressing the spiralling cost of rent is an essential step,” Ms Clay said.

“The time for talk is over, we need real action.”

NSW Labor abandons Closing the Gap targets as First Nations Remand numbers soar

During Budget Estimates it was revealed that the rates of First Nations children and young people on remand in the 12 months since June 2023 have increased by 43%. Of that figure, 29.8% of First Nations people are on remand for car theft, while 21.1% for break and enter. These figures reveal that not only are more First Nations children and young people coming into contact with the justice system since June last year, but that these young people are in remand due to the highly controversial changes to the bail laws that were rushed through the Parliament in April this year.

Under the National Agreement on Closing the Gap (Target 11), the NSW Government is committed to reducing the rate of young First Nations people in detention by at least 30 percent.

Greens MP and spokesperson for justice Sue Higginson said “We knew these laws were wrong when they were strong-armed through Parliament in April, but to see this soaring increase of young First Nations people in prison just months later, is absolutely devastating and damning,”

“First Nations people are already grossly overrepresented in the criminal justice system and we know the catastrophic impacts of this fact. Now shock-jock law-making has made certain that even more First Nations kids will be thrown into prison and it’s Premier Chris Minns and the Attorney General Michale Daley who have done this., This is what political failure looks like,”

“The increase in children and young people behind bars is worse than predicted, and it’s only half the story. The reality is that the majority of the children and young people locked up are likely there because they were denied bail under the changes NSW Labor rushed through NSW Parliament earlier this year,”

“We know that once a child or young person comes into contact with the criminal justice system their lives are irreversibly changed for the worse. These young, vulnerable people who need protection and care will more than likely cycle through our prison system for decades at an enormous emotional cost to themselves, their families and our communities,”

“NSW Labor is shattering any chance this state has of meeting our Closing the Gap targets. It is farcical for this Government to stand up and say they are committed to reducing youth incarceration rates on one hand, and on the other, legislate punitive law-and-order responses to lock away First Nations children and young people,”

“Under these laws these children have been targeted and rounded up like lambs to the slaughter. It is sickening how calculated the effects of these laws are, and this data reveals this in black and white,” Ms Higginson said.