Tuesday 1 December 2015

Bill Shorten calls for ambitious targets as COP21 climate talks get underway in Paris

Extract from ABC News

By Brigid Andersen
Updated about 6 hours ago



Opposition Leader Bill Shorten has called for ambitious climate targets to be set as world leaders gather in Paris for the United Nations Climate Conference.
Mr Shorten spoke to Lateline from Paris as the talks got underway and said nations that did not take strong action would be increasingly isolated.
"The whole reason for this Paris conference is because climate change is having worse and worse effects on our environment and even more importantly, on our economy," he said.
"So nations who think that they don't need to change, I think will get isolated in the future in trade and other arrangements between nations."
French president Francois Hollande officially opened the summit by telling world leaders that the "hope of all of humanity rests on your shoulders".
Mr Shorten said he would be attending a number of meetings while he was in Paris.
"I will be meeting with hopefully leaders from the Pacific Island nations. They really do count on Australia as being a big brother in the best sense of the word for standing up for their concerns," he said.
"I'm looking forward to talking with businesses. There's a lot of private sector interest in the decisions that will be made at Paris, and the decisions that nations make.
"See, if a nation like Australia sets ambitious goals, what will happen is that we can then encourage the private sector to step in and help deliver the solutions from technology to trade opportunities to investment in renewable energy."

Shorten says 'Turnbull playing in traffic'

He rejected suggestions a carbon price under the proposal could be as high as $200 a tonne.
"It's just complete rubbish," he said.
He said the climate change debate had been one of the more toxic issues in politics and that it would have been easy for Labor to just give bipartisan support to the Government's "ridiculously low targets".
"Malcolm Turnbull's caught. He's caught in the middle of the road on this. He's playing in the traffic," he said.
"On one hand he had to in order to become the leader of the Liberal Party, sign up to Tony Abbott's climate change policies, with their ridiculously low targets. On the other hand he should at least be honest with people and admit the consequences of change."
He said the cost of not acting on climate change was too high.
"The truth of the matter is that if sea levels rise, property will become, and infrastructure in Australia will become a lot more costly," he said.

"We'll have more drought. We'll have more extreme weather events. So there's a big cost in not acting."

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