Cut pollution - Make clean energy cheaper

Pollution from burning coal, oil and gas is driving a climate crisis, making our world more dangerous, increasing prices of food and water and jeopardising our way of life.

But if we cut pollution and invest properly in the clean alternatives, we can build a healthier, cleaner, more secure economy and community for all of us.

The best way to do that is to put a price on carbon pollution and use the revenue to help householders and invest in renewable energy, energy efficiency, public transport and forest protection.

That is what the Greens are doing, working with the government and the independent MPs through the Multi-Party Climate Change Committee we established after the 2010 election. We are working hard to get the best outcome for the climate, the community and the economy, and we need your support.
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What is a pollution price and why do we need it?

For too long, polluting activities which make climate change worse - making our world more dangerous, increasing prices of food and water and jeopardising our way of life - have been cheaper than the clean alternatives because they haven't had to pay for the damage they do.

Putting a price on pollution is about making polluters take responsibility. It is about using revenue to help householders and to invest in making the clean alternatives cheaper, creating jobs in new industries.

Putting a price on pollution sends a signal to investors that the costs of dirty choices are going up while the costs of clean alternatives are going down. With more investment in clean, renewable energy, costs will go down even faster thanks to economies of scale and technological breakthroughs. The price of coal, oil and gas is only going to keep going up. But the sun and wind are free, so the price of renewable energy is only going to keep going down as technology gets better and better.

With a pollution price, polluters will pay the costs of change. Without a pollution price, we will all pay as climate change bites.

Around the world, pollution prices are in place in Europe, parts of the USA, India and New Zealand and China is moving towards one while investing heavily in clean technologies.

Australia is in danger of being left behind.
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What will it mean to me?

When we go to the supermarket, most of us would like to buy the healthier or cleaner alternatives on offer, but we think twice about our choices if they cost more.

Putting a price on pollution and using revenue to help householders means cleaner products will be more competitive with dirtier ones – and each of us will have more money in our pockets to make an informed choice: do I pay more for the polluting product or do I instead choose the clean alternative, which is becoming cheaper thanks to the pollution price?

Over time, we will all reap the benefits of cheaper clean energy, cleaner air, a safer climate and a thriving, jobs-rich economy.

If we fail to address it, climate change will make food more expensive, it'll drive up the cost of water and energy, it'll push insurance premiums sky high. Climate change is a very high price to pay.

But putting a price on pollution means we can drive investment towards the new, clean energy economy while making sure governments have the funds to help people struggling to make ends meet.

The fact is, we can and will compensate people for the impacts of a price on carbon pollution. But we can't compensate people for the impacts of climate change.

Remember, the pollution price the Greens are working towards will charge Australia's biggest polluters for every tonne of pollution.

It is not a tax you will have to pay.
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Investing in clean, renewable energy

Putting a price on pollution is an important first step – but, to really tackle climate change and transform our economy for the future, we will need every tool in the tool-box.

Experts, from the International Energy Agency to Professor Garnaut, agree that teaming a price on pollution with well-designed policies to bring on renewable energy, energy efficiency, clean transport, etc, is the most effective way to deliver strong action over time.

The Greens want to see a feed-in tariff or loan guarantees to drive the construction of industrial-scale, baseload solar power plants which are already operating in the US and Europe. We want to see a major investment in our energy grid. We want a plan developed to transform our economy to 100% renewable energy as fast as possible.

We are also working to implement an energy efficiency target scheme to run parallel with the renewable energy target to make sure we find the best opportunities to save energy, cut pollution and save money in our homes, offices and industry.

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Still have questions?

Pollution Price and Clean Energy - FAQ

Why do we need a carbon tax?

For too long, polluting activities which make climate change worse have been cheaper than the clean alternatives because they haven't had to pay for the damage they do.

Putting a price on pollution is about making polluters responsible for the damage they cause and using the revenue to help householders and invest in making the clean alternatives cheaper, creating jobs in new industries along the way.

We can't just sit back and let continuing pollution make the climate crisis worse and worse. If we don't act, not only will we face sky-rocketing prices for food, water and insurance, as well as higher taxes to pay for the damage caused by extreme weather, but millions of people around the world will lose their homes, livelihoods or even their lives.

Putting a price on pollution isn't politically easy, but it is the right thing to do.

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What is this thing called a carbon tax? How will it work? Will I have to pay more taxes?

This is a tax on the 1000 or so biggest polluters in Australia, not on householders. You personally will not pay any more tax.

The biggest polluters will have to account for their pollution and pay the government an amount (still to be determined) for each tonne.

The revenue will be used to help householders with rising costs of living and invest in climate change programs such as making renewable energy cheaper. Some revenue will be used to compensate trade exposed industry to help them compete with those overseas who don't face the same costs. The Greens are arguing strongly that coal fired power stations should not be given any of the revenue.

Putting a price on pollution sends a signal to investors that the costs of dirty choices are going up while the costs of clean alternatives are going down. With more investment in clean, renewable energy, costs will go down even faster thanks to economies of scale and technological breakthroughs.

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What will it mean to me?

When we go to the supermarket, most of us would like to buy the healthier or cleaner alternatives on offer, but we think twice about our choice if they cost more.

Putting a price on pollution and using revenue to help householders means cleaner products will be relatively less expensive and you will have more money in your pocket. You will be able to make an informed choice: do I pay more for the polluting product or do I instead choose the clean alternative, which is becoming cheaper thanks to the pollution price?

Over time, you will get the benefits of cheaper clean energy, cleaner air, a safer climate and a thriving economy.

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A carbon price is all we need, isn't it? Once we've got that, we can ditch all other policies, surely.

Actually, a carbon price is good at delivering the cheapest pollution cuts right now, but if we are thinking long-term, planning for the transformation to a truly clean economy, we need other policies to make sure our industry is ready.

Experts from the International Energy Agency to Professor Garnaut and many more agree that teaming a price on pollution with well-designed policies to bring on renewable energy, energy efficiency, clean transport, etc, is the most effective way to deliver strong action over time.

The Greens want to see a feed-in tariff or loan guarantees to drive the construction of industrial-scale, baseload solar power plants, for example. We also want an energy efficiency target scheme to run parallel with the renewable energy target to make sure we find the best opportunities to save energy, cut pollution and save money across the economy.

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What about jobs? Won't it put thousands of people out of work?

Building a clean energy economy will create far more jobs than will be lost from the old, polluting industries, and many of the jobs need the same skills – boilermakers, electricians, welders, plumbers and more will all be in huge demand as we transform our economy.

The Greens want to see a Just Transitions strategy developed to help workers and communities who currently rely on the polluting industries to find work in the new, clean economy.

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Isn't Tony Abbott's plan better? Why can't you just invest directly in reducing emissions?

While the Greens and the government want polluters to pay for the pollution they cause, using revenue to help householders, Tony Abbott wants to use taxpayers' money to pay polluters in the hope that they will reduce their emissions.

Tony Abbott's plan would slug householders $720 a year to pay polluters, and, unlike our approach, it would give no compensation.

Not a single economic or environmental expert supports Tony Abbott's approach.

Tony Abbott's idea of paying polluters was tried for many years by the Howard government and it never worked.

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How much will this tax reduce temperatures by? Isn't it a joke?

There is already too much carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, pushing us closer and closer towards climate crisis. We need to immediately start the transition away from polluting energy to clean energy and the best way to make that happen is by putting a price on pollution and investing in clean energy.

Many countries around the world are ahead of us in this transition. Australia needs to play its role, both because otherwise we will be left behind and because we have a responsibility to do so as the world's 11th largest polluter.

If Australia plays its responsible role and the world acts fast, we can avoid the worst impacts of climate change and start to bring our climate back into the safe zone that has allowed our civilisation to flourish.

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Isn't this just a giant 'money-go-round? Surely if you compensate people, there is no point.

If we make polluting goods and services more expensive, but make sure that people have more money in their pockets, they still see a clear signal to choose cleaner options when they can.

It is different from our argument that compensating the big polluters undermines the price signal. In the case of polluters, they will not have to pay for a proportion of their pollution in the first place. That means the signal they receive is that much weaker.

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Why should Australia do this when nobody else is?

It is a myth that Australia would be leading the world. In fact, Australia is in danger of falling behind as our major competitors make big strides into the clean energy economy.

Full emissions trading schemes are operating in the EU, NZ and parts of the USA and a regional scheme is in preparation in China. India already has a tax on coal. In addition, China has some of the strongest policies to drive the uptake of renewable energy and electric cars in the world.

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Why is this approach better than the CPRS which you Greens rejected?

Where the CPRS acted as a ceiling on action, this plan acts as a foundation that we can build on into the future.

The CPRS, with its appallingly weak targets and high compensation, was designed in a way to make it almost impossible to strengthen. The government's own figures showed that it would deliver absolutely no change in Australia's economy for at least 15 years and the target could not be lifted to the kind of ambitious levels the science demands.

This price on pollution, on the other hand, is designed with the clear intention of becoming more ambitious over time.

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How does this compare to other major reforms such as the GST and trade liberalisation?

Although the changes over time are likely to be much bigger as we build a new, clean economy, the impact of the price on pollution on most Australians will be much smaller than the impact of other major reforms such as the GST or trade liberalisation.

The impact of the GST on household costs is about twice that of a carbon price as high as $40, or 3.5 times as much as a carbon price as low as $20.

Treasury modelling for a $40 carbon price suggested an average cost to householders of around $22 a week, which is around the same as the average household spends on toiletries and cosmetics each week, about half what we spend on fast food and well less than we spend on alcohol. (Comparisons to ABS Household Expenditure Survey 2003-04)

http://greensmps.org.au/content/pricing-and-reducing-pollution-faq

http://greensmps.org.au/pricepollution

Comments

One question what has four chimney stacks emitting steam got to do with pollution?

There are a number of adverse health and environmental effects of coal burning especially in power stations, and of coal mining. These effects include:

Coal-fired power plants shorten nearly 24,000 lives a year in the United States, including 2,800 from lung cancer

Generation of hundreds of millions of tons of waste products, including fly ash, bottom ash, flue gas desulfurization sludge, that contain mercury, uranium, thorium, arsenic, and other heavy metals

Acid rain from high sulfur coal
Interference with groundwater and water table levels

Contamination of land and waterways and destruction of homes from fly ash spills such as Kingston Fossil Plant coal fly ash slurry spill

Impact of water use on flows of rivers and consequential impact on other land-uses

Dust nuisance

Subsidence above tunnels, sometimes damaging infrastructure

Uncontrollable underground fires which may burn for decades or centuries.

Coal-fired power plants without effective fly ash capture are one of the largest sources of human-caused background radiation exposure

Coal-fired power plants emit mercury, selenium, and arsenic which are harmful to human health and the environment

Release of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, which causes climate change and global warming according to the IPCC and the EPA. Coal is the largest contributor to the human-made increase of CO2 in the air