logo
Energy Minister Chris Bowen doesn't rule out carbon tariff on high emissions producing imports

Energy Minister Chris Bowen doesn't rule out carbon tariff on high emissions producing imports

News.com.au2 days ago

Chris Bowen has been accused of following 'Donald Trump's lead' over comments suggesting Australia could force carbon tariffs on emission-heavy imports.
Mr Bowen didn't rule out enacting a carbon tariff on carbon-heavy sectors like cement and lime, stating that 'we'll have more to say during the course of this term'.
He said decisions would be made to 'ensure Australian industry is best placed to complete in a decarbonising world'.
'I'd urge against sweeping generalisations about policy settings,' he told the ABC on Sunday.
'What could be the case is obviously we look at particular sectors first, around cement and lime are places that we've looked at in particular, but again, I'm not going to get in front of the process.'
Mr Bowen also referred to the Carbon Leakage Review which was conducted by Professor Frank Jotzo.
Initial findings backed a border carbon adjustment mechanism that would make importers pay for the carbon created during production, identifying at-risk commodities like cement, lime and clinker, and moderate risk products like steel, glass and ammonia.
'We asked Professor Jotzo to look at this, he's been doing excellent work consulting Australian industry very heavily,' he said.
'I've had lots of meetings with steel makers and cement makers about these things over the past 12 months, for example, getting their feedback, and we'll have more to say during the course of this term.'
Newly installed Coalition energy and emissions reduction spokesman Dan Tehan seized on Mr Bowen's comments.
'Now before the election, Chris Bowen, this arrogant minister, said nothing about carbon tariffs, and yet, here he is immediately after the election, talking about putting them in place,' he said in a video shared on social media.
'Now let's have a look at what this minister has presided over. He's put our energy security at risk. He's put electricity prices up, he's put gas prices up, and he's put emissions up, and now he wants to follow Donald Trump's lead and put in place tariffs. What a mess.'
Appearing on Insiders, Mr Bowen also maintained that Australia is 'by and large on track' to meet our 43 per cent 2030 emission reduction targets, despite figures released on Friday revealing that emissions had increased year-on-year by 0.05 per cent.
While Mr Bowen conceded Australia needed to 'do more' to reach net zero by 2050, he said output from renewables were 'very encouraging,' while transport remained an issue.
'Now our new vehicle efficiency standards only came into force on 1 January, for example. I wouldn't pretend that they've yet had an impact,' he said.
'These are the sorts of things that we need to keep going on to ensure that we can achieve and will achieve a 43 per cent emissions reduction, which I'm very confident we can and will.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

WA Senator Dorinda Cox wiped from Greens website minutes after shock defection to Labor
WA Senator Dorinda Cox wiped from Greens website minutes after shock defection to Labor

News.com.au

time36 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

WA Senator Dorinda Cox wiped from Greens website minutes after shock defection to Labor

WA Senator Dorinda Cox has been wiped from the website and MP listings of her former party following her shock defection to Labor. Donning a maroon shirt and a massive smile, Senator Cox addressed the media on Monday afternoon alongside the Prime Minister at Perth's Kings Park. The Greens, her former party, were alerted to the defection a mere hour and half earlier. Senator Cox had been removed from the Greens' official website by the end of the press conference, with the URL link to her profile scrubbed and replaced with an 'ACCESS DENIED' banner. She also no longer appears in the listings of the party's representatives. Leader Larissa Waters questioned how the senator's values could align with a party that last week approved the North West Shelf gas project. 'The Greens are disappointed in Senator Cox's decision to leave the Greens and join the Labor Party as a backbencher,' Senator Waters said. 'Senator Cox has said that her values align with the Labor Party. 'This is the same Labor Party who this week approved the climate wrecking North West Shelf gas project, which UNESCO advises will destroy significant First Nations heritage and ancient rock art.' Senator Waters said Senator Cox would have had 'more chance of effecting change by continuing to work with the Greens in the sole balance of power'. 'The Greens are committed to continuing to work for Truth, Treaty and Justice with First Nations people and will continue to work to protect country and the climate that is under such threat from Labor Party decisions in Western Australia,' she said. 'We wish her well.' A statement by the Greens confirmed they had received notice of the move 'an hour prior'. It comes following months of internal conflict with the Greens, her former party, with several former staffers coming forward with bullying allegations against the senator. Up to 20 staff left the office of Senator Cox in three years, Nine News reported in October. Anthony Albanese said he was comfortable those complaints had been adequately addressed. 'We examined everything that had been considered in the past. Those issues were dealt with appropriately,' he said. 'My government has established very clear guidelines, meaning that any issues relating to workplaces and making sure that workplaces are safe are properly examined. They were all dealt with in Senator Cox's case and dealt with appropriately.' A former staffer told The Australian while it was not surprising to see Senator Cox part ways with the Greens, it was 'shocking' to see her accepted into the Labor fold by Mr Albanese. 'It is disturbing that Labor and the Prime Minister would welcome into their party someone with such a history of alleged bullying.'

‘Very concerning': One in three Australian men admit to intimate partner violence, horror study finds
‘Very concerning': One in three Australian men admit to intimate partner violence, horror study finds

News.com.au

time43 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

‘Very concerning': One in three Australian men admit to intimate partner violence, horror study finds

A major new study revealing intimate partner violence is on the rise despite efforts to counter it is 'very concerning', Tanya Plibersek has said. One in three men have admitted to abusing an intimate partner either emotionally or physically, according to the latest Australian Institute of Family Studies findings. It marks an increase from one in four about a decade ago. Reacting to the AIFS report on Tuesday, the Social Services Minister said it was clear the trend was headed in the 'wrong direction'. 'It looks at a large cohort of men over a long period of time, and what the research shows is that over about a decade, between the first report and the second report, the number of men who have ever used violence has increased from one in four to one in three,' Ms Plibersek told the ABC. 'That equates to about 120,000 extra men every year in Australia using violence for the first time in intimate relationships. 'Obviously that's a trend that's going in the wrong direction. The study found emotional abuse was the most common form of intimate partner violence. Thirty-two per cent of men in 2022 reported that they had made an intimate partner feel 'frightened or anxious'. Meanwhile, 9 per cent admitted to 'hitting, slapping, kicking or otherwise physically hurting' their partner when angry. But Ms Plibersek stressed the report offered 'some really good insights into what makes it more or less likely that men will ever use violence in an intimate relationship'. 'It shows that men who have good mental health, who have good social connections and social supports, and who have a good relationship with a father or father figure when they're young, are all less likely to use violence in their relationships,' she said. According to the report, men with high levels of social support 'all of the time' were 26 per cent less likely to say they had committed intimate partner violence. It also said men with strong relationships, with an affectionate father figure as a child, were 48 per cent less likely to say they had committed intimate partner violence. In contrast, men with depressive symptoms were 62 per cent more likely to abuse a partner when compared to others without these symptoms. 'I think a lot of people in recent years have reported social isolation and loneliness as bigger features in their lives,' Ms Plibersek said. 'It shows why it's important that we invest in mental health supports and we're doing that as a government — an extra billion dollars with Medicare walk-in mental health clinics, expanding the number of Headspace clinics, reinstating telehealth psychiatry, telehealth consultations. 'All of those supports make a difference. It shows why it's important that we are investing to help women as they leave violence with the billion dollars extra for the Leaving Violence (Program), the extra housing and extra billion dollars for that.' The government-funded study has tracked more than 16,000 boys and men since 2013 and added an additional 10,000 men in 2024-25. It is the first of its kind in Australia.

William Tyrrell disappearance: Disputed claim emerges that person of interest took Tyrrell 250km to Tamworth
William Tyrrell disappearance: Disputed claim emerges that person of interest took Tyrrell 250km to Tamworth

Daily Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Daily Telegraph

William Tyrrell disappearance: Disputed claim emerges that person of interest took Tyrrell 250km to Tamworth

Don't miss out on the headlines from National. Followed categories will be added to My News. A second person has come forward alleging a 'person of interest' in the William Tyrrell investigation was identified by his own brother as being involved in the three-year-old's disappearance The woman, Donna Bulley, said she reported this to police months after William was reported missing in September 2014, but it was not followed up by detectives. The NSW Police Force has instead focused on William's foster mother in recent years but has not charged anyone over what took place and has been described in court as having 'no forensic evidence' and 'no eyewitness'. The person of interest, Frank Abbott, is currently in prison for child sex offences against multiple victims. Detectives investigating William's disappearance did not focus on Abbott until around 2019, years after Ms Bulley attempted to tell police about him. Recorded prison phone calls from November 2019 reveal police suggested Abbott 'borrowed somebody's car and went down, enticed [William] out with lollies and ice cream out of the yard'. He has privately denied any involvement, however, and is not suggesting the new allegations about his brother are true, just that they have been made and have not been followed up by police. Abbott was also never questioned at the inquest investigating what happened to William, with the coroner ordering her decision on whether to do so cannot be made public. Our investigative podcast Witness: William Tyrrell spoke to dozens of people about Abbott, including two men who now live in his old house in the town of Johns River, a short drive from Kendall, where William was last seen. Last month, we revealed the older of these men said Abbott's late brother Jeffrey – also known as Bluey – 'always said, when the stories were going around with Tyrrell, that he didn't do it. '[But] pretty close to when he died, Bluey said to my son, 'He did do it … and he's buried up on Big Bird Mountain there, where that big tree is'. 'No one ever checked that out.' The man's son said he did not remember the conversation, saying instead that Jeffrey Abbott 'didn't … believe Frank had anything to do with it. 'But … I think he was under the belief that Frank needed the jail time,' he continued. 'He deserved to be in jail because of things he'd done in his past.' The new alleged witness, Ms Bulley, came forward last week, after we reported this disputed claim. New disputed claims have emerged about person of interest Frank Abbott. Frank Abbott as a younger man. Picture: Dean Sewell/SMH Ms Bulley said she had been working in the Royal Hotel in Kew, a small town a few kilometres from where William was reported missing and where Abbott was often seen around the time. A regular customer 'got talking a bit and he said, 'Have you seen that bloody Frank Abbott around love?', said Ms Bulley. 'And I went, 'Actually, now that you say that, no I haven't'. He went, 'No, that's because the bastard's in jail'. 'He said, 'His brother Bluey told me that he took that little boy to Tamworth the next day',' Ms Bulley continued. 'I rang the police and I told them what he said. They rang me back … and I missed the call and then I rang them back and left a message and nobody ever got back to me.' Ms Bulley said this conversation took place in late 2014 or early 2015. Abbott was jailed over unrelated child sex charges in April 2015 – seven months after William was reported missing. Her account does differ from that of the first person to allege Jeffrey Abbott claimed his brother was involved. That man claimed William was said to have been buried near a local landmark known as the Bird Tree, while Ms Bulley claimed William was said to have been taken to Tamworth. Disputed claims have emerged that William Tyrrell was driven to Tamworth. Police were found to have 'no forensic evidence' and 'no eyewitness' information incriminating William's foster mother in court. Picture: NewsWire / Nikki Short Other evidence before the inquest alleges a close friend of Abbott called Ray Porter claimed to have given 'my best mate' and William Tyrrell a lift in his car, driving them 300 kilometres north. Tamworth is about 250km northwest of Kendall. Other evidence heard at the inquest suggests Abbott did travel to Tamworth along with 'a little boy', although this was not confirmed. Other evidence before the inquest also said Abbott repeatedly claimed to know where William was, suggesting various places linked to other potential suspects. Mr Porter, as well as Abbott's brother Jeffrey, have died in the years since William's disappearance, while the age of the customer identified by Ms Pulley makes it possible he too has died. The inquest into William's disappearance has been running for almost five years, with its findings still not expected for months. The police investigation has been running for over ten years, yet no one has been charged. The NSW Police Force, Coroner's Court of NSW and Abbott have all declined to answer questions. Abbott has claimed in court that he is no longer a person of interest to the investigation but this has not been confirmed. Originally published as New claim that William Tyrrell person of interest 'took that little boy' 250km away from where he went missing

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store