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Hansard
- Start of Business
- PETITIONS
- MAIN COMMITTEE
- COMMITTEES
- HOME INSULATION PROGRAM (COMMISSION OF INQUIRY) BILL 2011
- AUDITOR-GENERAL AMENDMENT BILL 2011
- ENVIRONMENT PROTECTION AND BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION (ABOLITION OF ALPINE GRAZING) BILL 2011
- ABOLITION OF AGE LIMIT ON PAYMENT OF THE SUPERANNUATION GUARANTEE CHARGE BILL 2011
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AVIATION CRIMES AND POLICING LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2010
CRIMES LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2010
LAW AND JUSTICE LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (IDENTITY CRIMES AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2010 [2011] - STATUTE LAW REVISION BILL (NO. 2) 2010
- NATIONAL HEALTH AND HOSPITALS NETWORK BILL 2010
- EVIDENCE AMENDMENT (JOURNALISTS’ PRIVILEGE) BILL 2010
- COMMITTEES
- SCHOOLS ASSISTANCE AMENDMENT (FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE) BILL 2011
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STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS
- Leichhardt Electorate: Marine Wildlife
- Greenway Electorate: Regenesis Program
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Bowen, Mr Craig
Creevey, Mr Steve - Henry, Dr Ken
- Leukaemia Foundation: World’s Greatest Shave for a Cure
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Goss, Mr Matt
Ockenden, Mr Eddie - Murrindindi Shire
- Lucre, Mr Charles
- Electorate of Mitchell: Transport Infrastructure
- Jones, Mr Lachlan
- CONDOLENCES
- MAIN COMMITTEE
- CONDOLENCES
- MAIN COMMITTEE
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
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QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
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Carbon Pricing
(Rowland, Michelle, MP, Swan, Wayne, MP) -
Climate Change
(Truss, Warren, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Defence: Anglesea Barracks
(Wilkie, Andrew, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Climate Change
(Perrett, Graham, MP, Combet, Greg, MP) -
Asylum Seekers
(Keenan, Michael, MP, Abbott, Tony, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Libya
(Neumann, Shayne, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
East Timor
(Morrison, Scott, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Economy
(Symon, Mike, MP, Swan, Wayne, MP) -
Asylum Seekers
(Bishop, Bronwyn, MP, Bowen, Chris, MP) -
Indigenous Communities
(O’Neill, Deborah, MP, Macklin, Jenny, MP) -
National Education Standards
(Slipper, Peter, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Alpine National Park
(Thomson, Kelvin, MP, Burke, Tony, MP)
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Carbon Pricing
- JAPAN NATURAL DISASTERS
- DOCUMENTS
- COMMITTEES
- SCHOOLS ASSISTANCE AMENDMENT (FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE) BILL 2011
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DEFENCE LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (SECURITY OF DEFENCE PREMISES) BILL 2010
SCREEN AUSTRALIA (TRANSFER OF ASSETS) BILL 2010
CORPORATIONS AND OTHER LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (TRUSTEE COMPANIES AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2011
HEALTH INSURANCE AMENDMENT (COMPLIANCE) BILL 2010 - AUSTRALIAN CIVILIAN CORPS BILL 2010
- FAMILY ASSISTANCE LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (CHILD CARE REBATE) BILL 2011
- HUMAN SERVICES LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2010
- CORPORATIONS AMENDMENT (IMPROVING ACCOUNTABILITY ON DIRECTOR AND EXECUTIVE REMUNERATION) BILL 2011
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OFFSHORE PETROLEUM AND GREENHOUSE GAS STORAGE REGULATORY LEVIES LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (2011 MEASURES NO. 1) BILL 2011
OFFSHORE PETROLEUM AND GREENHOUSE GAS STORAGE REGULATORY LEVIES (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 2011 - OFFSHORE PETROLEUM AND GREENHOUSE GAS STORAGE REGULATORY LEVIES (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 2011
- EDUCATION SERVICES FOR OVERSEAS STUDENTS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2010
- PERSONAL PROPERTY SECURITIES (CORPORATIONS AND OTHER AMENDMENTS) BILL 2011
- FAMILIES, HOUSING, COMMUNITY SERVICES AND INDIGENOUS AFFAIRS AND OTHER LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (ELECTION COMMITMENTS AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2011
- PRIVATE MEMBERS’ BUSINESS
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ADJOURNMENT
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Tambling, Hon. Grant, AM
Solomon electorate - Multiculturism
- Carbon Pricing
- Blair Electorate: Building the Education Revolution Program
- O’Connor Electorate: TradeStart Offices
- Fremantle Electorate: International Women’s Day
- Harmony Day
- Women in the Workforce
- Brisbane Flood Donation
- International Year for People of African Descent
- Kusal Waraka Adidi
- Illawarra Flooding
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Tambling, Hon. Grant, AM
- Adjournment
- NOTICES
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Main Committee
- Start of Business
- STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS
- PRIVATE MEMBERS’ BUSINESS
- EDUCATION SERVICES FOR OVERSEAS STUDENTS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2010
- PERSONAL PROPERTY SECURITIES (CORPORATIONS AND OTHER AMENDMENTS) BILL 2011
- PRIVATE MEMBERS’ BUSINESS
- GRIEVANCE DEBATE
- Adjournment
Page: 2505
Mr GEORGANAS (8:32 PM)
—The fact is that the world is warming. The trend is absolutely indisputable and it is also intensifying. Simply, the numbers do not lie. Sadly, those who misrepresent the facts do lie and they should be ashamed for attempting to deceive the public.
Australia has been warming consistently, decade by decade, since the 1940s. Similarly, decadal averages of sea surface temperature around Australia have increased every single decade since 1900. There has been no cooling effect. Every decade has been hotter than the previous, on land or at sea—the numbers do not lie. Both air temperature and sea temperature are increasing and they are warming with increasing speed.
That these changes are contributed to by human pollution is not disputed by the overwhelming weight of credible science. Global warming is indisputable and is affirmed by every single major national scientific academy in the world.
The National Research Council, established by Abraham Lincoln, has affirmed:
Climate change is occurring, is caused largely by human activities, and poses significant risks for—and in many cases is already affecting—a broad range of human and natural systems.
Those scientists who say it is not happening clearly cannot convince other scientists of the merits of their views. Their positions have no scientific credibility and can only be discounted. In short, they are full of it—laymen who profess superior scientific knowledge. The conclusions of the great majority of qualified scientists directly engaged in the development and peer review of the science inform us that global warming is here and it is getting worse with increasing speed. These are the facts that we must contend with and the forces that we as humans must counter.
Industry has stated emphatically that we need to price carbon. The Business Council of Australia, Origin Energy, TRUenergy, AGL, Santos and Shell Australia have all said that we need to establish a new economic playing field on which industry—very much including these energy-generating companies—can get on with investing in the infrastructure that keeps our society powered and running.
On the basis of the feedback that I have been receiving in my electorate of Hindmarsh, community opposition to the accepted science is absolutely minimal; opposition to decreasing Australia’s emissions is negligible; and interest in the numbers, how the mechanism will work and its effect on consumers is quite real. People are also interested to learn that the USA is now pushing ahead with cuts of 17 per cent, and even China is pushing ahead with 40-odd per cent cuts per unit of GDP. The world is pushing ahead and getting on with doing its part—except, it seems, Australia.
The question is: how do we decrease our emissions? I believe those who do the polluting should pay, not those who are captive to the necessities that industry creates. We have in our midst politicians who want a command economy where big government tells everyone what to do, where their money goes and what they can buy. Like governments of the Soviet era, we have here in this parliament an opposition that opposes and seeks to undermine the principles of market economics. The opposition’s big government will drain taxpayers of $30 billion, handing money over to select big businesses. Australians will still face higher and higher electricity prices, broke and alone, under the opposition’s policy. We have a limited supply and the relentlessly increasing price of electricity and people’s inability to afford this electricity—none of this will change under Tony Abbott’s Soviet style carbon economy.
In contrast, the government will charge the big polluters for their pollution and give a large part of that, possibly $25 billion or so over five years, to the consumers, who will themselves be able to choose how to spend it. Labor is the party of consumer choice. We can have 20 million people making personal decisions on spending money on less carbon intensive goods and services, promoting market forces— (Time expired)