
‘Climate charlatans': Greens' big call on Labor
If Labor falls short of the 76 seats needed to govern in majority, it would need to look to the crossbench to form government.
The Greens have hounded the Albanese government for greenlighting dozens of new coal mines and gas wells over its first term, and will on Monday use Parliamentary Library analysis to claim Climate Minister Chris Bowen could block new projects under existing laws. Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek has approved dozens of coal and gas projects since Labor won power in 2022. Jason Edwards / NewsWire Credit: News Corp Australia Climate Minister Chris Bowen may be able to limit new projects. Mark Stewart / NewsWire Credit: News Corp Australia
'In the middle of a climate crisis, Tanya Plibersek has approved new coal mines that will release 2.5 billion tonnes of climate pollution,' Greens leader Adam Bandt said in a statement.
'If the Environment Minister won't act, the Greens will get the Climate Minister to do it.
'The Greens will keep Dutton out and get Labor to stop approving new coal and gas mines, because you can't put the fire out while pouring petrol on it.'
According to the Parliamentary Library, Mr Bowen may be able to restrict projects under the Safeguard Mechanism, which requires polluters to limit emissions to the national targets of 43 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030 and net zero by 2050.
The Parliamentary Library acknowledged the 'area of law is complex' and warned its brief 'may not be fully comprehensive'.
Though, Mr Bandt was confident, saying that through Safeguard Mechanism negotiations, the Greens 'gave the Climate Minister the power to stop new coal and gas mines with the stroke of a pen, and with more Greens in minority Parliament we'll get him to use it'. Greens leader Adam Bandt says Labor 'are climate charlatans'. NewsWire/ Glenn Campbell Credit: News Corp Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has ruled out working with the Greens to form government. Jason Edwards / NewsWire Credit: News Corp Australia
'They talk up renewables but open up coal and gas. Labor are climate charlatans and the Liberals climate criminals,' he said.
'If you're worried about climate change, you can't keep voting for the same two parties and expecting a different result.
'If you want climate action, you have to vote for it, because it's clear Labor won't act on climate unless pushed.'
The Greens have flagged four other key demands, including expanding Medicare to cover dental health, negative gearing and capital gains tax reform, ending logging in native forests, and free universal early childhood education.
The Prime Minister has ruled out negotiating with the Greens to secure a minority government, but his pathways would be limited, based on the current make up of the House and Senate.
Mr Albanese has also flatly rejected any changes to negative gearing, which housing reformists have identified as a major hurdle for first home buyers.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
3 hours ago
- Sky News AU
‘Wishful thinking': Albanese insists Hamas could be dislodged from Gaza
Sky News host Freya Leach accuses Prime Minister Anthony Albanese of 'wishful thinking' for believing Hamas could be dethroned from governing a Palestinian state.

Sky News AU
4 hours ago
- Sky News AU
PM pressed to tackle cost of living while balancing global role
Former Labor councillor Linda Scott defends the prime minister's promise to keep a sharp focus on easing cost of living pressures at home while also navigating Australia's international responsibilities. "Labor just won an election with a whole suite of policies about what they're going to do," Ms Scott said. "They're rolling it out, they've already done student debt relief, they've reduced the costs of medicines. "They're also recognising that millions of Australians are distressed about the fact that we are seeing images every night on the news of children starving ... this is a clear human rights crisis that Australia cant ignore."

Sky News AU
4 hours ago
- Sky News AU
‘Worst case of FOMO': Sky News host torches PM for ‘naive' Palestine decision
Sky News host James Macpherson says Anthony Albanese's decision to recognise Palestine was caused by the Prime Minister suffering from the 'worst case of FOMO' and following suit with other Western leaders. The Prime Minister and the Foreign Minister confirmed Australia will recognise Palestinian statehood at the UN General Assembly in September. 'In the Albanese political universe, momentum is more important than sense and being part of the international herd is far more important than worrying about which direction the herd is running,' Mr Macpherson said. 'Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas is about as believable as Anthony Albanese – but not nearly as naive.'