The Australian coal industry is the beneficiary of a taxpayer-funded $300 million discount on diesel fuel. At least $9 billion of taxpayer subsidies are palmed across to fossil fuel industries, greenhouse gas increasing, polluting, carbon footprint bloating fossil fuel giants.
Meanwhile the development, construction and funding of renewable energy in this country creeps along at glacial pace with little or no help from our State or Federal Governments.
For heavens’ sake, we are a renewable energy goldmine here in Australia. With our hot climate and endless open spaces we have enough sunshine (plus room to capture it) to power the entire country hundreds of times over. We’re an island with endless coastal breezeways that would be wind farm paradise. And, did I mention we’re an island? Tidal and ocean current energy sources completely surround us. We have got renewable energy potential coming out of our proverbials.
Instead, the Federal government directs public money at the ratio of 28:1 towards fossil fuel use over renewable energy use.
All it takes is a government with the gumption to divert the funds away from the coal, gas and oil industries and into the renewables industry. The Howard Government has left us languishing behind the rest of the world and it seems no-one is willing to make the effort to catch up.
To give you an example of how pathetic some of our governments around the country are, you need go no further than the New South Wales Government’s sorry excuse for a Renewable Energy strategy. What does the Iemma government come up with? Committees, billions pumped into new baseload power stations, calls for private sector to fund infrastructure costs. And when they get to Clean Energy, the first thing mentioned is Clean Coal – in other words carbon capture. Rather than reduce the use of coal powered power plants, the Iemma Government wants to
- Increase their use and
- Rely on an, as yet, unproven form of locking away the carbon emissions they will produce.
But wait, you keep reading and of that $160 million, the state government is setting aside $100 million of it for the Clean Coal Fund. So once again, the coal industry gets the bulk of the funding rather than putting it where the future lies, in renewable energy.
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