Australia news live: Greens want to negotiate with Labor on emissions targets; white whale not Migaloo, authorities confirm
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Authorities confirm white whale is not Migaloo
A white whale that washed up on a Victorian beach is not the well-known albino humpback Migaloo, according to the state’s environment department.
The carcass of an albino whale was found at a beach in Mallacoota in the state’s far east this week, sparking concern it could be Migaloo, who was first spotted off Byron Bay in 1991.
But Peter Brick, of Victoria’s Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DEWLP), said images of the carcass that had been viewed by officials proved it was not Migaloo. He told AAP:
DELWP officers have examined images of the dead humpback whale at Mallacoota and have confirmed it is a sub-adult female. Migaloo is a male.
Updated at 20.56 EDT
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What one jobseeker is forced to do to keep her benefits
A 63-year-old woman from regional South Australia needs to make a 250km round trip to meet her mutual obligations and keep her benefits under the new $1.5bn-a-year Workforce Australia program.
Michelle (name changed), who lives in Yorketown, on the Yorke Peninsula, has been referred to a job agency in Kadina, about one and a half hour’s drive or 125km from her home.
Under the mutual obligations system, jobseekers who are connected with a job agency must attend appointments with case workers at an employment services provider to keep their payments. However, these appointments do not count towards the new points-based activation system that requires jobseekers to complete various tasks to get enough points to keep their welfare payments.
It comes after another jobseeker told Guardian Australia this week he would need to travel 60km by bus to his appointment after the job agency in his town closed.
For all the details on how people are grappling with the latest overhaul of the social security system, read the full report by Guardian Australia’s social affairs and inequality editor Luke Henriques-Gomez.
Updated at 21.22 EDT
No new Covid deaths in Queensland
No people with Covid-19 have died in Queensland overnight, with the state recording 5,989 new cases on Sunday morning, 876 people in hospital, and 20 in ICU.
Queensland to roll out EV charging stations into outback
Electric vehicle drivers will soon be able to travel through the Queensland outback, with dozens of new charging stations set to be rolled out, AAP reports.
The state’s energy and renewables minister Mick de Brenni said on Sunday that Queensland’s “Electric Super Highway” will expand inland to mining town Mount Isa in the north and Cunnamulla near the NSW border, with 24 new stations planned.
The first charging station to open as part of the phase 3 will be at Kingaroy in August. Other stations including Longreach, Cloncurry and Stanthorpe will open in the coming months.
De Brenni said the rising cost of fuel and supply chain challenges had increased the urgency for more affordable and clean energy options.
Queenslanders are acutely aware of the current global challenges driving up the costs of transport, so developing Australia’s sovereign energy independence through more locally made energy is making more economic sense than ever.
Charging stations already stretch along the state’s coast, allowing electric vehicle drivers to travel from Coolangatta near the NSW border to Cairns in the tropical north.
The phase 3 rollout will make the charging network almost 5,400km long.
It comes as Queensland’s electric vehicle fleet grows to 10,161 cars and buses, up from 525 in 2017.
Updated at 21.26 EDT
Authorities confirm white whale is not Migaloo
A white whale that washed up on a Victorian beach is not the well-known albino humpback Migaloo, according to the state’s environment department.
The carcass of an albino whale was found at a beach in Mallacoota in the state’s far east this week, sparking concern it could be Migaloo, who was first spotted off Byron Bay in 1991.
But Peter Brick, of Victoria’s Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DEWLP), said images of the carcass that had been viewed by officials proved it was not Migaloo. He told AAP:
DELWP officers have examined images of the dead humpback whale at Mallacoota and have confirmed it is a sub-adult female. Migaloo is a male.
Updated at 20.56 EDT
Victorian Coalition would legislate a 50% emissions target
The Victorian opposition is promising to legislate an emissions reduction target of 50% by 2030 if it wins the November state election.
Opposition leader Matthew Guy on Sunday unveiled the policy, which matches Victorian Labor’s target and is higher than the 43% goal set by the federal government.
The Victorian government has already committed to slashing emissions 50% by the end of the decade, but has not legislated the interim target.
Under the Coalition’s plan to reach the 2030 target, it has pledged to establish a $1bn hydrogen strategy, upgrade transmission infrastructure in western Victoria to unlock renewable energy and set up a “Fixing Victoria’s Grid” taskforce.
It will also legislate a local gas guarantee for new supply, a policy first announced in 2017, within the first six months of taking office.
Guy said it showed the Victorian Liberals’ and Nationals’ commitment to climate change action says it will “send the strongest possible signal that action on climate change is a priority”.
– with AAP
Updated at 20.50 EDT
Severe weather warnings across NSW
The Bureau of Meteorology has forecast rain across much of southern Australia and severe weather warnings across New South Wales for Sunday that will ease into this evening.
Updated at 20.35 EDT
White whale not Migaloo
Authorities appear to have confirmed the white whale on Mallacoota beach is not Migaloo.
Full details yet to come.
Updated at 20.26 EDT
Chalmers dismisses criticism over pandemic leave payments
Treasurer Jim Chalmers has brushed off criticism the government was too slow to act in reinstating the pandemic leave payments in the wake of rising Covid-19 cases, AAP reports.
The $750 pandemic isolation payment, which ended on 30 June, was extended to the end of September following a national cabinet meeting on Saturday.
The government had previously ruled out bringing back the payments due to budget pressures.
Acting opposition leader Sussan Ley said the government had been dragged “kicking and screaming” to reinstate the payments, but Chalmers described the criticism as ridiculous.
It was her government a little over eight weeks ago that designed this program to end at the end of June.
We will get on with our work, working with the states and territories, led by premiers and chief ministers of both persuasion.
The treasurer said there would be an increase in Covid cases across the country in coming weeks.
Clearly for us, we’re about to have another spike in cases.
A new telehealth program will start next week, allowing GPs to spend longer with patients to assess their suitability for Covid-19 antiviral treatments.
Updated at 20.18 EDT
Dutton calls for Aukus submarine process to be sped up
Opposition leader Peter Dutton has called on the government to speed up the process to acquire nuclear submarines as part of the Aukus security pact.
Following growing tensions in the Indo-Pacific region, Dutton said it was critical the timeline be condensed surrounding the vessels.
It comes after defence minister Richard Marles flagged an announcement on whether Australia would acquire US or UK-made submarines as part of Aukus during the first quarter of 2023.
A decision would then be made on when the new vessels would become operational.
Dutton said it was important for cooperation to be sped up on the issue:
The agreement was struck under the Coalition government, we really fought hard, we negotiated a very difficult discussion.
We got, I think, the best possible outcome and it’s laid out for the Labor party now to implement, and hopefully they don’t get in the way of it.
I hope that they can really condense the timelines, because the very clear sense that I’ve got out of our discussions with the [US] administration here is that things are deteriorating in relation to China.
The comments come as Dutton attended the Australian American Leadership Dialogue in Washington.
The bipartisan event was also attended by Marles, with Aukus key among the topics discussed with American officials.
– from AAP
Updated at 21.02 EDT
Dutton: possible war in Europe reason for opposing 43% target
Opposition leader Peter Dutton has appeared on Sky News from Washington this morning, where he raised the prospect of war in Europe as a reason for opposing the government’s effort to lock in a 43% target:
If our trading partners or an ally like the United States or others in Europe decided to adjust their emissions, if Europe went into a broader war, then – and there was a severe economic downturn, would the government want to have a legislated 43[%]? Or would they want to adjust and deal with the reality of the times?
A report by InfluenceMap, a European thinktank that tracks lobbying by fossil fuel companies, found in May that the war in Ukraine has become a key talking point in the US oil and gas sector to slow efforts to combat climate change:
The industry appears to be using a number of key narratives to push its pro-fossil fuel agenda, many of which appear to include misleading claims or misinformation.
These narratives are being used to push for a long-term role for oil and fossil gas in the energy mix and appear to be targeted towards specific policy demands. These include advocating for policies which encourage new and/or increased oil and gas production, and rolling back previous climate policy decisions that limited the production of oil and gas or required climate considerations in new projects.
Updated at 19.57 EDT
Greens want to negotiate on emissions targets
And that’s a wrap! Just to recap, Greens leader Adam Bandt was at pains to point out the Greens want to negotiate on emissions targets and were trying to push back on the “take it or leave it approach” so far adopted by the federal Labor government.
While this may help Labor frame itself as a moderate government, it also risks alienating those constituencies that voted for stronger climate action with the Greens and independents.
Updated at 19.49 EDT
Bandt: ‘Labor is hellbent on opening new coal and gas projects’
The conversation then moves on to new fossil fuel projects. Bandt makes the point that Australia’s environmental laws allow approvals without any consideration of how they will contribute to climate change. Bandt uses the example of WA and NT:
Look at what happened in Western Australia under a Labor government. The Environmental Protection [Authority] came out and said if we’re going to open up new gas projects, it’s all got to be offset and it’s all got to be carbon neutral, and the Labor government came in and said, ‘nah, we’re going to override that, we’re going to give you a free pass, and you can keep on polluting and open up the new projects’.
The Northern Territory Labor government since the election has already come with its handout to the federal government, saying can we have public money, taxpayers’ money, used to open up the Bedaloo? That will be a test for the federal government as well.
Bandt then sums up the Greens’ assessment on Labor’s current approach:
What we’re learning clearly is Labor is hellbent on opening new coal and gas projects. Part of the Greens’ job is to try and push them and say if we are in a climate emergency – and we are, and the government has just agreed to this this week, in an emergency – you don’t make the problem worse.
You don’t put the fire out while you’re pouring petrol on it.
Updated at 19.48 EDT
‘Our strong preference is to work with the government,’ says Greens leader
Bandt is trying to be really clear about what the Greens want out of this term of parliament:
I think the message from this election is take action on climate and people want us to work together to take action on climate.
Our strongly preferred approach is to improve and pass. But if the government says it’s our way or the highway, then we’re going to have to respond to that.
Our strong preference is to work with the government to get good climate legislation passed. And if the government’s willing to sit down and talk, we are too.
Updated at 19.42 EDT
Bandt: ‘Labor’s vote went backwards’
Speers asks Bandt about Labor’s mandate and suggests this shows Australians do not support a legislated 43% target. Bandt’s response is that the Greens vote also massively increased:
Labor’s vote went backwards. The Coalition’s vote went backwards. The parties and independents whose vote went up were the ones who said we’ve got to stop opening coal and gas. The government – we now have a situation where less than one in three people in this country voted for the government, OK?
[…] A number of people voted for the Greens and preferenced them. That’s a clear message. Do better on climate.
Updated at 19.41 EDT
Greens’ questions for the government
Bandt lays out what the Greens want to know from the government: 1) any emissions target can’t be a ceiling; 2) a genuine floor on the emissions target; 3) no ability for governments to backward; and 4) what is the target going to make the government do?
Updated at 19.43 EDT