Liberals squirm as South Australia's parliament declares climate emergency

September 28, 2019
Issue 
Students at the September 20 Climate Strike in Adelaide. Photo: Gemma Weedall

For the first time in Australia, a house of state parliament has voted to declare a climate emergency.Β 

South Australia’s Legislative Council passed a motion moved by Greens MLC Mark Parnell on September 25 affirming β€œthat we are facing a climate emergency” and calling for the transformation of the economy to net zero emissions.Β 

The ACT Legislative Assembly declared a climate emergency in May.

Lacking a majority to block the declaration, members of the state’s governing Liberal Party were unwilling to be seen losing a formal count. Instead, they allowed it to be passed β€œon the voices”.

But that was not before the Liberals tried in vain to obtain the support of crossbenchers for an amendment to delete all references to a climate emergency.

For SA Liberals, climate change is a vexed topic that shows the party’s deep-rooted hypocrisy on environmental issues.Β 

Liberal Premier Steven Marshall has sought the support of environmentally conscious voters by presenting himself as a champion of renewable energy. To the discomfort of federal colleagues, the state Liberals have endorsed the previous Labor government’s target of 75% renewable electricity by 2025.

But it is hard to see what else Marshall and his ministers might have done. Renewable energy is overwhelmingly popular in SA: early this year, an showed almost 70% support in the state for a target of 100% renewables by 2030.

In any case, there is no entrenched coal lobby in SA to cajole and browbeat local Liberals. The state’s last coal-fired power station shut down in 2016.

SA Liberals, however, do not have a climate policy β€” just an energy policy.

The for the most recent state elections in March last year featured a total of 148 policy positions. Not a single one of them appears to have mentioned climate change. That includes even a point on assistance to Murray River irrigators.

SA depends heavily on the Murray for its water supplies. Irrigation farmers in the state suffered grievously during the turn-of-the-century β€œBig Dry”, when water allocations were drastically reduced.Β 

Climate change also poses a dire threat to the state’s substantial rain-fed agriculture. Like other regions of the world with Mediterranean climates, SA faces rapid drying as climate change causes winter storms to retreat polewards.Β 

Not even drought-stricken farmers, however, seem able to focus the minds of Liberal parliamentarians on these dangers.

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