Australians overwhelmingly want the renewable energy target to be
retained or even increased, as the Abbott government considers
abolishing the incentive for new renewable projects.Polling
for the Climate Institute shows 72% of Australians want to keep or
expand the renewable energy target (RET), which requires that 20% of
energy is sourced from renewables by 2020.This is
slightly higher than the 69% who said they wanted the RET maintained or
increased when the same questions were posed in last year’s poll,
despite a strong campaign over the past year by industry groups and
Coalition backbenchers arguing that the RET was increasing power prices.
Respondents
were then told “opponents of the scheme say the RET is a subsidy that
drives up electricity bills, while supporters say it has helped create
jobs and has tripled Australia’s wind and solar energy since 2009”. 71%
still thought it should remain at its current level, 20%, or be
increased, even after hearing the arguments. Support was especially high
among women, with only 7% wanting the RET decreased or abolished. But
government sources said the Abbott government is likely to
“grandfather” the scheme after it receives the final report from its
review of the program, led by businessman and self-professed climate
sceptic Dick Warburton. This would see it deliver only about one third
of the renewable power that was originally legislated – with bipartisan
support. The sources said the challenge now was to work out how this could be achieved in practice.
The
Coalition went to the election promising to keep the RET, which
underpins investment in energy sources such as wind and solar, but
saying it would review the fact that the policy was exceeding its
original goal of delivering 20% renewable energy by 2020 because of
falling electricity demand. As yet unreleased modelling
for business groups including the Business Council of Australia, the
Minerals Council of Australia and the Australian Chamber of Commerce and
Industry has considered four options: leaving the RET as it is,
reducing it to a “real” 20%, “grandfathering” it to allow only existing
investments to continue, and abolishing it altogether. In
its submission, the Institute of Public Affairs think tank, which
favours abolition of the RET, says the government has three options,
abolition, “grandfathering” or reducing it to a real “20%”. The
RET is currently required to deliver 41,000 gigawatt hours of
renewables by 2020 (which was 20% of what it was incorrectly estimated
that the market would be). To deliver 20% of the current market this
would have to be reduced to 33,000GWh. Grandfathering would deliver only
15,000GWh.
The poll also found that 76% of people
think state governments should do more to provide incentives to
renewable energy. Again the strongest support came from women (82%). The
poll was conducted for the Climate Institute by JWS research from May
16-20. The sample size was 1,145 and the margin of error is 2.9%. Warburton, a veteran industrialist and the chairman of the Westfield Retail Trust, described his views on climate science
in a 2011 interview on ABC in this way: “Well, I am a sceptic. I’ve
never moved away from that. I’ve always believed sceptical,’’ he said.
“But a sceptic is a different person than a denier. I say the science is
not settled. I’m not saying it’s wrong. I’ve never said it’s wrong, but
I don’t believe it’s settled.”
Source The Guardian
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