Search for Sustainable Stuff

Tuesday 24 September 2013

Postcard from the Edge

How do we promote sustainability when:

  • The Commonwealth Government announces it will not commit to its own reduction target for greenhouse emissions if the sums don't add up.
  • Australia's independent agency for providing advice on climate change issues is abolished to save $1.8 million dollars.
  • Australia's agency for providing clean energy loans is told by its Minister to stop doing so, in apparent contravention of its own legislation.
  • Powers concerning protection of World Heritage, National Heritage, Wetlands of International Importance, listed threatened species and ecological communities, listed migratory species, nuclear actions, the marine environment will no longer be controlled by the Commonwealth but will be given to the States.
  • The Industry Minister describes opponents of coal seam gas mining as "noisy protesters, minority groups, with no interest in the economic progress of agriculture and mining together.''

Let's face it, the current Australian political climate is not encouraging anyone to undertake sustainability activities. Can sustainability operate in a policy vacuum? Where do we find the incentive to act?

The forthcoming International Panel on Climate Change report may provide that incentive. But will we see more misinformation from sectors of the media and more silence from the Government who could take the trouble to correct it?

Thank goodness for the Australian public who have crowdfunded the former Climate Commission to reinvent itself as the Climate Council, and provide an independent voice on climate science.

Sustainability managers can take inspiration from this development, but don't expect the next few years to be easy.







 

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