Renewable energy boom set to go up in smoke
Renewable energy boom set to go up in smoke
Sydney Morning Herald Ben Cubby Environment Reporter
December 16, 2008
UNTIL yesterday the so-called “green revolution” was ready to roll, but the renewable energy industry doubts the Government’s white paper will allow it to get out of first gear.
The fear is that since carbon permits are limited to $25 a tonne, and many are being given away, the emissions trading scheme will simply add a little lead to the saddlebags of heavy polluters without giving enough incentive for investors to switch to emissions-free technology.
“There’s no doubt the white paper is actually undermining the potential for green-collar jobs in Australia,” Mark Diesendorf, the deputy director of the Institute of Environmental Studies at the University of NSW, said.
“We’ve put up a message that says to investors ‘stay away’.
“We have a huge raft of proposals for large wind farms, for baseload solar plants, we have huge potential for jobs in the energy efficiency sector, but that potential needs the right policy settings from government so businesses can start to make investments.”
Among many reports produced in recent months, a study by the ACTU and the Australian Conservation Foundation found that 500,000 jobs could be created in renewable sectors of the economy by 2030.
But the soft start to emissions trading, together with the modest ambitions for carbon cuts, is unlikely to create a jobs boom………………………..
The white paper would be more likely to maintain the status quo than wean Australia off coal-fired power, said Iain MacGill, the director of the Centre for Energy and Environmental Markets at the University of NSW.
“The real winners today are clearly large emitters who appear to have successfully persuaded the Government to propose weak 2020 targets and provide them with billions of dollars of subsidies beyond even those proposed in the green paper,” Dr MacGill said.
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