House debates

Wednesday, 16 March 2016

Questions without Notice

Climate Change

2:20 pm

Photo of Malcolm TurnbullMalcolm Turnbull (Wentworth, Liberal Party, Prime Minister) Share this | Hansard source

I thank the honourable member for Melbourne for his question. We are transitioning from an old economy or an older economy to a new one—a 21st century economy, one that is grounded in innovation, in technology, in competition—and every lever of our policy is pulling in that direction. Climate change is part of that response. We have effective and responsible climate change policies that are working. We are on track to beat and meet our 2020 emission reduction target. Our 2030 target is responsible and in line with that of comparable countries.

The honourable member should recognise that we are reducing emissions with our Emissions Reduction Fund; we are promoting energy efficiency and clean energy innovation; and we are investing in large-scale renewable energy, particularly large-scale solar and storage. Our targets are protected through the emissions safeguard mechanism. As I said in Paris at the climate change conference, we do not doubt the scale of the challenge, but we are optimistic that we can tackle climate change through innovation and our ability to develop and share technologies. More importantly, rather than endlessly debating rhetoric—and with all due respect to the honourable member, some of the language he used in his question, while no doubt heartfelt, was so imprecise that it is of very little assistance to a government that is seeking to meet a particular challenge and a particular target.

What we need in the response to global warming—and I do not doubt that temperature figures that the honourable member referred to—is a clear commitment of all governments, all major economies, to emissions reduction strategies. We have made those commitments. We have the policies in place. They are working. And that is the object of the exercise. Emotion and passion have their place—

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