HOME (English with subtitles)

on Saturday, October 30, 2010

Reducing emissions will create 3.7 million jobs in Australia

on Wednesday, October 6, 2010

The Australian Conservation Foundation and ACTU have released a report calledCreating Jobs - Cutting Pollution that concludes that Australia can create 3.7million jobs across Australia by taking strong action now to reduce carbon emissions.

The report calls for a price on carbon, investment in renewable energy, in public transport and more efficient vehicle fleets, and a national energy efficiency strategy for both commercial and residential buildings.
Last month Melbourne-based research organisation Beyond Zero Emissionspublished a study showing Australia could, if we chose, make the switch to 100 per cent renewable energy by 2020 using existing solar, wind and biofuel technology.
These a just the latest in a flurry of studies showing that we can move to a low-carbon, clean tech future. In this recent blog I mentioned a number of other studies along similar lines.
All that it needs now is some political leadership.

Why a carbon tax will put money in your wallet

on

Now a report by the Australia Institute  claims a carbon tax would leave a typical Australian family $1000 better off.
The report says, if the Government can resist lobbying for exemption and concessions from big polluters (and that's a big if), then a carbon tax of $25/tonne on energy generators would raise $13 billion. That's enough to pay a carbon dividend of $2100 to a family of four. Meanwhile, Treasury calculates the tax would increase electricity and other prices by $18.50 for the average family - under $1000 a year.
Of course, in real life this will depend on how much energy you use.
But that's the whole point of a carbon price; to encourage us to be more energy efficient, to drive less and to switch to less fossil-fuel intensive products. Reduce your "carbon footprint" and you'll be better off under a carbon tax.
Of course, if there are winners there must be losers. Shareholders of big polluting industries will see their dividends drop. And that might affect the level of your Super. So maybe it will all even out in the end on the tax money-go-round.
But if the net result is we reduce our use of fossil fuels and finally get on the road to tackling climate change, we'll all be winners in the long run.