Worried economists call for a carbon price, a tax on coal exports, and ‘green tariffs’ to get australia on the path to net zero

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Australia’s top economists have overwhelmingly backed the reintroduction of the carbon price that helped cut Australia’s emissions between 2012 and 2014. The government concedes that


achieving its legislated emissions reduction target of 43% below 2005 levels by 2030 and net zero by 2050 will be difficult. With official forecasts showing Australia falling short, the


Economic Society of Australia asked 50 leading Australian economists what should be done to speed things up. Offered a choice that included nuclear energy, accelerated investment in


large-scale batteries, and a rapid phase-out of traditionally fuelled vehicles, 30 of the 50 picked a carbon price of the kind introduced by the Gillard Labor government in 2012 and


abolished by the Abbott Coalition government in 2014. Another five said they supported an economy-wide carbon price, but wouldn’t nominate it in the survey because it would face “significant


political hurdles” and would not be “politically feasible”. ------------------------- ------------------------- The Department of Climate Change told the government in December it was on


track to fall short of its 2030 target of a 43% cut on 2005 levels, but that with “additional measures” it could get to 40%. In October this year, Climate Change and Energy Minister Chris


Bowen described the 43% target as “ambitious” and a “difficult task”. The scheme the economists were asked about was a “cap and trade” scheme, of the type common in much of the world. In


these schemes, the government sets a cap on the total number of emission permits produced each year and allows users to trade them with one another to set a price. A CARBON PRICE BY ANOTHER


NAME The Gillard government’s scheme was initially a fixed charge per tonne of carbon emitted by big polluters. It was set to switch to a cap and trade scheme after three years, but ended up


being abolished after two. In its place, the Abbott government created a “safeguard mechanism” that currently applies only to the 219 biggest polluting facilities in Australia. It requires


each to keep emissions below a government-set baseline, and allows them to trade emissions reductions with one another. The economists were asked about expanding the mechanism to make it


mimic an economy-wide carbon price. In response, 42% said they wanted to boost the number of facilities it covered, and 26% wanted to tighten the baselines to push up the price.


------------------------- ------------------------- All but seven of the 50 economists wanted either an economy-wide carbon price or an expanded safeguard mechanism that would act as one.


Independent economist Hugh Sibly said it might well be that nuclear, hydrogen or other sources of energy were the most efficient ways of decarbonising the economy, but it would be impossible


to know until Australia started charging for emitting carbon and allowed the market to work out the cheapest way of coping. Half of those surveyed wanted to expedite the building of new


transmission lines to link places where electricity was being produced with places where it would be needed. One-third wanted expedited investment in large battery storage. Economists


including Macquarie University’s Lisa Magnani justified this by saying it was necessary for the government to move in ahead of the private sector to provide the infrastructure the private


sector would need in order to decarbonise “within the time left to act seriously”. NO NEW MINES, TAXES ON EXPORTS FROM EXISTING MINES Many experts surveyed wanted bolder measures than those


proposed by the Economic Society of Australia. Former OECD official Adrian Blundell-Wignall said Australia’s coal exports create almost two and a half times the emissions Australians produce


domestically. “What is the point of moving to net zero on the latter while we do nothing on coal exports?” he asked. His proposal, aired in the Australian Financial Review, is for Australia


to tax exports of the metallurgical coal used to make steel, forcing up the price and reducing global demand. Australia has 55% of the market. If higher prices brought in more tax and


resulted in less burning of metallurgical coal, it would be a win-win for Australia and the world. Mark Cully, a former chief economist at the Australian industry department, said Australia


should follow the lead of France, Denmark and Sweden and ban new fossil fuel projects. The supply restriction would push up the relative price of fossil fuels and encourage a faster global


take-up of renewable energy. IMPOSE GREEN TARIFFS ON DIRTY IMPORTS Australia should also join the European Union in implementing a green tariff, the so-called Carbon Border Adjustment


Mechanism that imposed an emissions tax on imported goods whose emissions were not taxed in the country in which they were produced. Cully said too much of Australia’s concern was directed


to energy, a sector where emissions are genuinely beginning to fall. In other sectors, emissions have plateaued or are even rising, making it “inconceivable that Australia can meet its 43%


reduction target by 2030, let alone net zero by 2050, without other high-volume emissions sectors contributing”. Frank Jotzo, director of the Centre for Climate Economics at the Australian


National University, said carbon pricing has to be complemented by targeted measures aimed at industries such as transport, building, agriculture and reforestation. He said Australia will


soon need to back measures that suck carbon dioxide back out of the atmosphere, acknowledging that many emissions will continue and will therefore need to be offset in order to get to net


zero. CRITICAL OPPORTUNITY, BUT CRITICAL CHALLENGE University of Tasmania economist Joaquin Vespignani said state and federal governments should “invest” in the production of the so-called


critical minerals that will be needed for decarbonisation via tax deductions. Australia has more than 20% of the proven global reserves of minerals such as lithium that are essential for


clean energy production and storage. Michael Knox of Morgans Financial noted the International Agency believed the world would need to ramp up its production of critical minerals to three


times its present level by 2030. Energy investment would need to double, and electricity transmission grids would need to roll out an extra two million kilometres of wire per year. The


Agency described the task as Herculean. Knox said it was far from certain to be achieved. ------------------------- _Individual responses. Click to open:_