Senate debates

Tuesday, 25 June 2024

Matters of Public Importance

Energy

4:10 pm

Photo of Malcolm RobertsMalcolm Roberts (Queensland, Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party) Share this | Hansard source

For those watching at home, we're debating a motion the Liberals-Nationals coalition introduced proposing a matter of public importance. The motion complains that, 'Labor's 82 per cent renewables by 2030 target is way behind schedule.' I have two responses to that: 'Who cares!' and 'Good!' Renewables are the collection of wind, solar, hydrogen, battery, pumped hydro and other scams that parasitic billionaires own and pump up with billions more in taxpayer subsidies. Every new solar panel and every new wind turbine installed represents another increase in Australians' power bills.

I commend the Liberals and Nationals for further opening the debate on nuclear, which One Nation has always advocated. I cannot abide, though, the insistence that we do nuclear so that we can meet net zero targets. Net zero is economic suicide, human catastrophe and environmental disaster. The only thing that can truly bring Australian power bills down is coal and, in North Queensland, hydro. To comply with net zero, the coalition's proposal is to forcibly acquire coal-fired power stations, shut them down and replace them with nuclear. We don't need to end coal to do nuclear. We can do both. Why would we stop using coal here while we ship hundreds of millions of tonnes of coal to China and other countries every year. The United Nations World Economic Forum net zero target: that's why. A foreign, unelected bureaucratic organisation is telling Australians what we can and can't do.

There's only one solution: tell the foreign, unelected organisations and their billionaire donors, like Bill Gates, to bugger off. Australia is one of the most resource-rich countries in the world. We should be using every bit of these resources right here for the benefit of Australians and especially for getting back to being the source of the world's cheapest electricity. Put Australians first.

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