Tasmania – Greenpeace Australia Pacific https://www.greenpeace.org.au Greenpeace Australia Pacific Thu, 04 Apr 2024 02:19:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://www.greenpeace.org.au/static/planet4-australiapacific-stateless/2018/05/913c0158-cropped-5b45d6f2-p4_favicon-32x32.png Tasmania – Greenpeace Australia Pacific https://www.greenpeace.org.au 32 32 What Is The CCAMLR, And Why Should We Care? https://www.greenpeace.org.au/article/ccamlr/ Mon, 23 Oct 2023 13:00:00 +0000 https://www-dev.greenpeace.org/australiapacific/article/ccamlr/ This blog uncovers how the Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) works, and its continued failure to protect the Southern Ocean.

Adélie Penguins in the Antarctic
Adélie penguins in the Antarctic

The Southern Ocean, the waters which encircle Antarctica, is a critical area for climate regulation and marine biodiversity – but currently less than  5% of it is fully protected.

It’s puzzling, especially when there exists a Commission that was established with the specific intent to protect Antarctic marine life. The Antarctic Ocean Commission (CCAMLR) was established in 1982 by an international convention, in response to krill populations being decimated as a result of overfishing. Krill are integral to maintaining the Antarctic ecosystem, and also play a vital role in locking away carbon in the deep sea.

The Commission meets on an annual basis in Hobart, Tasmania to review and develop Antarctic conservation measures. It was responsible for creating the world’s largest marine protected area (MPA), in the Ross Sea region in 2016. Covering 2.09 million square kilometres the MPA protects biodiversity and vulnerable marine ecosystems.

But for the last six years no new MPAs have been created, which begs the question: why? To answer this you have to understand how the decision making process within the Commission works. The body consists of 27 members and 10 other countries that have accepted the convention.

When a proposal is tabled it can only be adopted if all members agree. If some members veto the proposal it cannot be adopted. In simple terms, even if the majority of countries recognise the need for ocean sanctuaries, a minority can derail the whole process.

This was what happened during last year’s meeting when the Commission failed to reach consensus on creating three large MPAs for the Antarctic Peninsula, East Antarctica and the Weddell Sea, despite support from an overwhelming majority of governments.

Apart from this inefficient, consensus-based decision making process, governments who prioritise fisheries over safeguarding our oceans have  resulted in the CCAMLR consistently failing to provide Antarctic waters with a network of protected areas it so desperately needs.

Every day ocean threats are mounting. Climate breakdown has resulted in the Antarctic sea ice likely hitting a low winter maximum, while overfishing and pollution are slowly tearing away at our oceans life-sustaining fabric.

The Commission has the power and authority to support proposals for marine protected areas that have already been tabled to protect four million square kilometres of ocean now.

The next CCAMLR meeting is taking place in October 2023. Will the Commission deliver on its commitments and take the first steps towards protecting at least 30% of our oceans by 2030? Or will they once again allow one or two governments to block urgent ocean protection in favour of self-interest?

Unlike the CCAMLR’s failed efforts, the Global Oceans Treaty is a tool that can make ocean protection a reality. We urgently need to ratify this Treaty for 30% of our oceans to be protected by 2030. To do this, at least 60 governments need to sign on.

Sign our petition now to ask the Australian government to urgently ratify the Global Oceans Treaty, and start protecting our oceans!

]]>
AGL, take note — the future of energy in Australia is 100% renewable, clean and affordable! https://www.greenpeace.org.au/article/agl-take-note-the-future-of-energy-in-australia-is-100-renewable-clean-and-affordable/ Wed, 23 Jun 2021 14:00:00 +0000 https://www-dev.greenpeace.org/australiapacific/article/agl-take-note-the-future-of-energy-in-australia-is-100-renewable-clean-and-affordable/ AGL v Greenpeace Australia Pacific Court Hearing in Sydney
Greenpeace Australia Pacific activists in front of the Federal Courts of Australia.

With huge potential to generate solar and wind energy, there’s no doubt Australia can become a renewable energy superpower. By phasing out coal, oil and gas, and ramping up wind, solar, hydro output and battery storage capacity — Australia’s energy grid will become 100% renewable, 100% self-sufficient, and 100% affordable.

So, what’s the problem? Well, major fossil fuel companies, like AGL, continue to burn coal at an extraordinary rate. It’s heating up our climate, polluting our land, air and water, destroying our health, and taking us further away from our goal to limit global heating to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. 

As Australia’s largest climate polluter, AGL has a responsibility to replace its polluting coal fleet with renewable energy by 2030. That’s what both the UN and the International Energy Agency say is needed to cap temperature rise at 1.5°C. AGL currently plans to burn coal until 2048. But AGL doesn’t have to be Australia’s Greatest Liability — it can become part of the solution.

A Victorian School Strikers protest against AGL Energy’s burning of coal at their coal-fired power station, Loy Yang A, in the La Trobe Valley.

Change is happening globally — but Australia needs to get on board, ASAP

If you haven’t noticed already, global energy markets are going through a massive transitional phase — from dirty, polluting fossil fuels — to clean, affordable renewable energy. Australia’s status as a ‘coal capital’ once served us well, but now, the Morrison Government’s inability to guide the transition to renewable energy has put us at odds with our friends and allies and is making us outcasts on the international stage.

UN chief António Guterres has issued a clear, stern warning to climate laggards like Australia to end its “deadly addiction” to coal by 2030. Plus, the International Energy Agency has made it abundantly clear that if the world is to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050, new coal, oil or gas projects must come to an end this year. The world’s key players in the midst of a ‘green revolution’. The 2021 G7 summit saw the richest, most industrialised and most influential nations agree to stop investing in new coal-fired power projects beyond 2021 — citing the desire to achieve a decarbonised power system within the 2030s.

Greenpeace Australia activists in front of the Federal Courts of Australia.
Greenpeace Australia activists in front of the Federal Courts of Australia.

A green future for Australia is inevitable 

So, where does this leave Australia? The Morrison Government knows that the decline of coal, oil and gas is inevitable, and the fossil fuel industry knows it, too. That’s why some of Australia’s major polluters are already taking tentative steps towards a gradual shift away from dirty, outdated fossil fuels towards clean, green renewable energy. 

For example, EnergyAustralia took a step in the right direction earlier this year when it announced it will close Yallourn Power Station in Victoria’s Latrobe Valley in mid-2028 — four years earlier than its scheduled retirement date — and build a new 350MW utility-scale battery in the region by 2026 to boost renewable energy storage capacity. Although more action is needed, this will reduce the company’s carbon dioxide emissions by approximately 60 per cent relative to today.

Plus, Australia’s third-largest emitter, Stanwell, recently announced its plans to abandon coal and pivot towards a future in renewable energy. 

Girl in Mask Walking Dog
AGL is Australia’s Biggest Climate Polluter

Renewable energy makes sense — because it’s cheaper than ever. 

Recently, the CSIRO confirmed that even when taking into account extra system integration costs — solar photovoltaics (PV) and wind remain the cheapest new sources of electricity.

The price of solar is plummeting faster than any other energy technology! The major growth in both large-scale and small-scale solar installations allowed solar energy to contribute 34.4 per cent of all renewable energy generation in 2020. New small-scale solar added 3 GW of capacity to the energy grid and surpassed hydro to become Australia’s second-largest source of renewable electricity.

But the growth won’t stop there! A 2016 study conducted by the Institute of Sustainable Futures at the University of Technology Sydney found that — with proper planning and preparation, plus increased investment in wind, solar, and hydro — Australia could have a fully decarbonised electricity sector by 2030 and a fully renewable energy supply system, including transport and industry, by 2050. Amazing, right?

Thanks to Aussie states and territories — we’re well on the way to reaching 100% renewable energy 

In 2020, each state and territory saw its renewable energy capacity grow by more than 20 per cent to reach a national capacity of 27 per cent — and it’s showing no signs of slowing down! Despite the presence of coal-obsessed, climate laggards within Parliament — states like Tasmania and South Australia are already proving that 100% renewable is 100% doable. 

Upon reaching 100% renewable energy capacity in November last year, Tasmania is setting its sights on a target of 200% renewable energy by 2040. It’s expected that Tassie will produce twice its current electricity needs and export the surplus to the mainland via the proposed AU$3.5 billion Marinus Link cable.

South Australia continues to prove that it’s possible to shift from coal to clean energy without hurting the economy or energy supply. SA now has about twenty large wind farms and four large solar generators in the state, with many more projects in the pipeline, including big batteries. These projects will pave the way for SA to reach 100% renewable energy by 2030, at the latest. The turnaround is a pretty impressive feat, considering that SA was 100% reliant on fossil fuel as recently as 2006!

As a traditionally coal-dominated state, New South Wales is making waves with its Electricity Infrastructure Roadmap; promising to deliver $380 million over the next four years to support 12 GW of renewable energy capacity. Plus, a recent report by Reputex found that NSW can reach 100 per cent renewable energy as early as 2030!

The continued rise of clean energy is inevitable: it’s not a question of if, but when, Australia will be powered entirely by renewables

It’s expected that five of Australia’s remaining 16 coal-burning power stations on the east coast could become financially unviable as early as 2025. Propping up these dying and potentially near-stranded assets is pointless and expensive — especially when these facilities could be transformed into sources of clean, green, affordable energy for all Australians!

Greenpeace’s report — Coal-faced: exposing AGL as Australia’s biggest climate polluter — reveals that renewable energy technologies can be implemented at scale to replace AGL’s ageing coal-burning power stations, as has happened elsewhere around the world. In the UK in 1990, coal accounted for 75 per cent of all of its electricity generation — now, it’s just 2 per cent. Closer to home, New Zealand is set to reach 100 per cent renewable energy by 2030

That’s why we’re calling on Australia’s biggest climate polluter, AGL, to be part of the solution. As a giant in the Australian energy sector, AGL can ensure this transition happens as quickly as possible by closing all its coal-burning power stations before 2030 and replacing them with renewable energy sources. 

This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for AGL, and other major polluters, to shift their focus and get on the right side of history. We know that it’s possible, and we know that it’s necessary — but we need your help to make it happen! So, will you join us in pressuring AGL to quit coal and switch to 100% renewable electricity?

]]>
Heaps Better Episode 2: How can we speed up renewables? https://www.greenpeace.org.au/article/heaps-better-episode-2-how-can-we-speed-up-renewables/ Thu, 04 Mar 2021 13:00:00 +0000 https://www-dev.greenpeace.org/australiapacific/article/heaps-better-episode-2-how-can-we-speed-up-renewables/ In this episode, we chat with Simon Holmes à Court, a Director of the Smart Energy Council, and Lindsay Soutar, Greenpeace’s Campaigner for renewable energy and lead of the REenergise campaign. We’re also visiting a carbon neutral kinder and a solar powered brewery. You might be thinking, how exactly can we ditch the biggest coal, oil, and gas giants to fully embrace a renewable transition? We can all do our bit in our homes, schools, and offices, but we’ll also unveil the biggest energy users who need to pull their weight too: big corporations who use a whopping 71% of global emissions!

Renewable_Revolution|Renewable_Revolution
|

We’re going back to kindergarten to tackle Australia’s dirty fossil fuel industry and how exactly we, everyday Australians, can take part in making our communities heaps better with renewable energy. Australians are some of the biggest carbon emitters per person around the world, but this also gives us the chance to also be one of the biggest changemakers in our fight to save our planet.

This (and so much more!) is possible together. In this episode, we chat with Simon Holmes à Court, a Director of the Smart Energy Council, and Lindsay Soutar, Greenpeace’s Campaigner for renewable energy and lead of the REenergise campaign. We’re also visiting a carbon neutral kinder and a solar powered brewery. You might be thinking, how exactly can we ditch the biggest coal, oil, and gas giants to fully embrace a renewable transition? We can all do our bit in our homes, schools, and offices, but we’ll also unveil the biggest energy users who need to pull their weight too: big corporations who use a whopping 71% of global emissions!

The best way we can make waves together is by making our government and corporations make changes on a systemic level.

 

 

Ep2: How can we speed up renewables?  – TRANSCRIPT

Ash: Why do you like to take care of the Earth?

Will: Well, because it helps you not to die. What? Why aren’t you talking? This is a serious talk about
Earth! If you don’t have Earth then you’ll die! I’m trying to protect the Earth

Jess: Ash, who is this?

Ash: This is Will, he’s just graduated from Australia’s first carbon neutral kindergarten.

Jess: That’s so cool!

Ash: And this is his little sister, Isla, who’s three.

Isla: We don’t punch mother Earth!

Jess: Greetings, inhabitants of Mother Earth. I’m Jess.

Ash: I’m Ash, and we’re two friends who don’t want to punch Mother Earth.

Jess: In Australia, we punch way above our weight in greenhouse gas emissions, especially when
we include our exports. We are the fifth largest greenhouse gas emitter in the world.

Ash: But we’ve just found out that Australia could be a renewable energy superpower.

Jess: So why aren’t we there yet? And what’s holding us back? And what can we do to pack the
biggest punch and speed up the renewable revolution?

Listeners: How easy is the transition from non-renewable, like coal mining and things to
renewables?
Like, it’s a grid network, I’ve heard about a grid, but I’ve never really heard too many details.
I’m a renter, so I can’t do solar panels, although I certainly would like to.
Is solar legitimately a good investment?
I just simply do not understand why there is so much government hesitation to move towards
investing more in clean energy?

Jess: So we are using this podcast to figure out what we can do to make the world heaps better with the help of our planet-saving friends at Greenpeace Australia Pacific.

Isla: I’m trying to save the “flanet”!.

Jess: ‘Cause saving the “flanet” is heaps better together!

Ash: But first, pack your lunch box. Yes, you can have some tiny teddies. We are going back to
school. If you’re in charge of Australia, what would you do to make it heaps better?

Isla: Um, don’t throw garbage in the back garden!

Jess: Oh Ash, I really don’t want to dump garbage in her garden. What’s the carbon neutral kinder
like?

Ash: I mean, it’s in Victoria, so they were in lockdown at the time, which is why we’re doing Zoom
interviews. So I asked director Jenny Whelan to tell me what it’s usually like at the carbon neutral
can be.

Jenny Whelan: If you come to Kinder on a Friday afternoon, you’ll see the children in the garden and
they’re reading the water meter, they’re reading the electricity.

Ash: I’ve seen a video of it, there’s kids who are five with clipboards walking around reading
meters like tiny tradies, and they’re reading the solar metre, not the gas, because they got the gas
disconnected.

Jenny Whelan: The vision has been really powerful to make an actual statement to become carbon
neutral and then to sit back and go, well, what are the steps that will take us there? And for us,
we established very early that solar panels would be the most important factor in reducing our
emissions.

Ash: So she had this dream of going carbon neutral and built a team around her of parents,
children, the local council, even health professionals.

Jenny Whelan: So have a dream, build a team is the way that we achieve all our big, lofty goals.

Jess: “Have a dream, build a team”, I love it, Ash, it’s so good.

Ash: And they worked together on this vision for five years to build a fully certified carbon neutral
kindy!

Jenny Whelan: It is interesting when you have a big, lofty goal and you achieve that goal, there is
what happens next moment. But for us, we did find that, which is to partner with our local primary
school and high school to form a Sustainable Schools Alliance.

Jess: I really want to hear more about this carbon neutral kinder. But can things like a kinder change
the system?

Ash: OK, let’s deal with this. Let’s talk about power and how we can change the power system in
Australia. Our electricity accounts for almost a third of our annual carbon emissions, or footprints.
We are one of the largest emitters per person and the only country that still relies on coal for more
than half of our electricity generation.

Jess: Coal, we are obsessed with the stuff. So, Ash, I wanted to find us an expert who is obsessed
with renewable energy.

Simon Holmes à Court: I’m Simon Holmes à Court and I’m a Director of the Smart Energy Council.

Jess: Simon advises the Energy Transition Hub and the Climate Energy College at Melbourne Uni,
and he started Australia’s first community wind project.

Ash: All right. So he has every finger in the pie of renewable energy!

Jess: Is there anything in the last 10 years that’s blown your mind and really given you hope that,
like, big things can happen in the next five or 10 years?

Simon Holmes à Court: There’s so much, Jess. We were in the process a decade ago of building
this first community wind farm and we had many other communities that wanted to do the same
thing. We’d go up to Canberra and we’d say, ah, you know, renewables are great because, look,
like they might cost a little bit more, but there’s the environmental benefits, there’s the economic
benefit, there’s local jobs. What’s been stunning to me is that about maybe about four years ago, the
economics changed so dramatically that now you don’t have to make that case for renewables. You
speak to anyone in industry and they know their next project is going to be wind or solar or storage
because it’s the cheapest way of getting things done.

Ash: OK, great. So we want our whole country to be powered by renewables. How does Simon think
we’re tracking?

Jess: So he told me we’re about a quarter of the way already and we’re on track to have 30 per cent
of our energy coming from renewable sources by the beginning of 2021.

Simon Holmes à Court: Almost all of that is coming from wind and solar. And so far, the majority of
the solar has been from the roof of households in Australia. So just from everyday people. We have
the highest rooftop solar uptake per capita anywhere in the world.

Ash: Well, I did not know that! Way to go households of Australia!

Jess: And where we headed, what’s the most ambitious but really achievable future for, say, 10
years or 20 years?

Simon Holmes à Court: One of the most interesting studies comes from the Australian Energy
Market Operator (AEMO), and it has us at 96 per cent renewables in 2042. Fast forward to then and
almost all of our electricity will come from wind, solar, a bit of hydro and a bit of storage.
Ash: So we could be almost entirely renewable by 2042?

Jess: Yeah, but we don’t even have to wait that long, we could be 75 per cent renewable by just 2025.

Simon Holmes à Court: What they’re saying is that in the moment we’ll be able to handle up to 75
per cent using current technologies. And that that report was basically saying, hey, if we want to go
above 75 percent, we’re going to have to invest a bunch in the technology to help us integrate.
Jess: So basically, like a challenge to this 75 per cent thing is if we can get that grid set up and
strong enough to handle all this new stuff.

Ash: Hang on – why do we need new technology?

Jess: The grid was built for fossil fuels with old technology, so it’s kind of like it needs an upgrade.

Ash: So it’s like old speakers that can’t handle that bass? OK, so what’s the grid?

Jess: Let’s think of it like a dance floor at your school dance. Fossil fuels got us here, so they like
your parents dropping you off, but then they stay on the dance floor –

Ash: Aw Daaaad, this is so embarrassing! And his music sucks.

Jess: Our energy grid dance floor was built for fossil fuels, and for so long it’s been full of these coal
burning power stations. All these oldies taking up all the space while we just watch along patiently
from the sidelines. However…

Simon Holmes à Court: What’s basically happening is our coal power stations are reaching the end
of their technical life and the end of their economic life is a bit like an old car. You can keep throwing
money at the maintenance, but eventually gets to a point where you realise it’s cheaper just to get
rid of it and get a new one.

Jess: The Hazelwood Coal Power Station in Victoria and the Liddell Coal Station in New South
Wales, for example, were at the end of their lives and needed 400 million dollars just to keep
operating.

Simon Holmes à Court: And the owners said this is just not worth it. We’re not going to ever get
that money back. It’s reached the end of its technical life and it’s just not economic to keep it going.
So they’re closing it down.

Ash: So our daggy old parents are finally shuffling off the dance floor anyway?

Jess: Let’s say they’re retiring.

Simon Holmes à Court: One by one, our coal power stations and closing down. We’ve closed 13 in
the last six years and we’ve got 19 to go. They’ll just fall over one by one as they reach the end of
their life.

Ash: OK, 19 to go, 19 old coal power stations still boogin’ on the dance floor…

Jess: But! We’ve all got rooftops and on those rooftops we can put solar panels and then any
excess power that we generate goes back into the grid. So we don’t actually need coal anymore
because we’re making the power ourselves and we’re flooding onto the dance floor!

Ash: Yeah, it’s like thanks for bringing us this far, Mum and Dad, but it’s our time to dance!

Jess: And all this technology and solar panels and batteries to store all the excess power that we
generate, it’s all getting cheaper, too.

Ash: Oh, my gosh. Renewables is like the hottie on the dance floor, radiant like the sun, hair blowing
in the wind turbine takes me in their arms, and – and yes.

Jess: Yes! So with all these new dancers, the grid needs a little bit updating. We have about two and
a half million households with solar on the roof, and that requires more technology.

Ash: So we need to demand a better sound system?

Jess: Yes, but the more of us dancing on that dance floor, plugging renewables into the grid, the
larger the flow of investment and jobs and technology to improve that grid, and the less room there
is for boring, outdated, old and dirty coal.

Ash: OK, so what I’m hearing is we’re actually trying to reduce our emissions, right?

Simon Holmes à Court: It’s not right to say that we’re trying to reduce our emissions. Sadly, we
need we need policy for that.

Ash: Oh… we’re not trying.

Jess: Well, the government isn’t prioritising reducing emissions for reducing emissions sake. But
Simon says it’s happening anyway.

Simon Holmes à Court: So it’s almost like it’s a sideshow what’s happening in the politics and
media. If we look at any of the statistics on where we’re going in the electricity sector, it’s rapidly
moving. We’ve built more renewables in the last three years than we did in the 30 years before. This
transition is well underway.

Ash: OK, just so I’m actually really psyched on this, when Simon says that the transition is already
happening just because it makes more economic sense, I read up and Australia’s most respected
economists are talking about how Australia could be a renewable energy superpower, like, globally.
Even our Chief Scientist Alan Finkel is saying that we should be aiming for 700 percent renewable!
Jess: 700%? How does that work?

Ash: Right? And then my brain just explodes and coats the walls, and then when I scrape it back to
my head, I’m like, that’s not how math works. And then I say, no, it is! Because we get 100 percent
renewable energy here, and then we sell our excess energy overseas. We export it. We lay down a
giant underwater extension cord and plug in Southeast Asia, for example, and pump the excess
on a wind power out to their grids. We’re exporting renewables instead of coal. And the more I look
at it, it’s like, OK, so more countries are setting renewable energy targets, which means they’re no
longer going to be needing our coal. And China is like one of our biggest buyers and they’ve just
announced their plan to go carbon neutral. So I guess we can’t really keep being a coal superpower.

Jess: Buuuut there’s a little problem…

Simon Holmes à Court: We don’t have a coordinated plan in Australia of shutting these power
stations down, the transition is happening, it’s locked in, but it’s either going to be, you know,
disorderly chaos or a managed transition. Both and both start from where we are and both end up
at the same place. But the managed transition is cheaper, more reliable power and workers will get
looked after and won’t be disruptive. Whereas the chaos? People will get hurt and it’ll cost more
than it should.

Ash: I mean, this is the thing I don’t get. The whole world is basically saying that we need a green
recovery from the pandemic. We can use those funds that are being mobilised to stop economies
from collapsing, to build a better future. But I keep hearing so much about gas in Australia.

Jess: Well, I asked Simon about that…. Simon, can we talk about gas? Because there’s been all
this talk about, you know, the Covid gas-led recovery and the Prime Minister referring to gas as a
transition fuel. What does it mean? Do we need gas? Is gas really a transition fuel? Is this going to
help our transition or hinder it?

Simon Holmes à Court: Yeah, yeah. So that phrasing that gas is a transition fuel is what people
used to say a decade ago. So a couple of a couple of things. In Australia, we have some of the
world’s best resources for wind and solar, which means that we have some of the cheapest
renewable energy production in the world. Meanwhile, we don’t have cheap gas. Our gas costs
two, three, four times as much as US gas, because when we go fracking, we don’t pull out any oil.
We frack and pull out gas. And it’s much more expensive operation if that’s all you’re getting out
of it. So we’re in the middle of a crisis. A lot of people have been advocating that we should use
this opportunity for, you know, to decarbonise our economy. But Australia, which, you know, our
politics are significantly in the throes of the fossil fuel industry. The industry has seen this crisis as
an opportunity to extend it to further their interests. So, yeah, there are no technical or economic
reasons why we should be looking at gas right now. The technical and economic case is actually
very, very weak. Yeah, no, it’s just politics and vested interests. This gas, it’s really just a missed
opportunity, I think, to you, an opportunity we could be using to decarbonise. But we’re going to faff
around the edges, debating gas for the next six months or so. And nothing major is really going to
happen on that front.

Ash: Hold up. Who is the Government actually dancing with here?

Ash + Jess: We interrupt this broadcast to bring you a message from your hosts, Ash and Jess.
Every now and then it’s important to take a break, find a buddy, have a movie night, make a bowl of
popcorn! And learn about the vested interests slowing your country down from flicking the switch
and turning off fossil fuels. Tonight’s film, Dirty Power comes courtesy of Greenpeace.

Dirty Power documentary: While much of the world is taking decisive action on climate change,
Australia is going back.

Ash: We’re not going to play the whole thing right now, but for a taste, his own parts that made us
gasp.

Ash + Jess: * Gasping in shock many, many times *

Ash: You know, I think a lot of us have a feeling that there are these dirty dealings, but watching
Dirty Power shows you how it’s actually all connected. It’s like a map.

Jess: Yup. Everyone should watch Dirty Power. It is 15 minutes long and you will find out so much
about just how deeply our political parties and certain media organizations, and even sneaky
nonprofits with innocent names like the Great Barrier Reef Foundation, are all deeply tied to each
other and to fossil fuel groups. The link to watch Dirty Power is on Heaps Better website, and you
can get that via the show notes. So back to Simon. If this is genuinely slowing things down, what do
we do about it?

Simon Holmes à Court: OK, so it’s frustrating that we could do this faster and cheaper if there was
federal coordination, if we were, you know, if we didn’t have the feds trying to trip us up at every
point. But this transition is absolutely happening. And, you know, we’ve got to keep fighting the
forces that would want to slow that down. But I think success is assured in that sector, not fast
enough. We’ve got to make sure these coal power stations close in the next 10 years. Right now,
they’re on a path to close in 20 years.

Ash: So these 19 coal stations are already set to close in about 20 years. But we’ve got to get them
shut down in the next 10.

Jess: So all righty, lessons: What is in your experience or your mind is the one thing that I can do
as an average Australian to contribute to speeding up this transition, and to support the renewable
industries?

Simon Holmes à Court: So on the home front, if you own a north facing roof in Australia, put solar
on your roof. You’re throwing away money if you don’t. But what you’re doing is every day as the
sun comes up, you’re going to be pushing coal out of the system and the solar is coming on at such
a fast rate, it’s pushing coal out. And we’re going to see two or three coal power stations pushed
out of the grid over the next two years and that’ll be significantly because of the householders of
Australia.

Ash: So Jess and I are both renters, so it’s kind of a little tricky for us to get solar panels installed.
Jess: But our parents own their rooftops and I found out that a big barrier for my Dad to getting
solar panels installed was the cost and hearing stories about people getting sold poor quality
panels.

Ash: So while Jess was doing the research for her Dad, I stumbled upon a random website. I was
like, well, how do I get a solar quote? Getting a quote takes like ten minutes. I spoke to a lovely guy
called George. I was like, Dude, do you mind if I start recording this conversation? Because me and
my friends all want to get involved with solar, but a lot of us are renters and we don’t know how to
do this.

George: We do install on rental properties as well. A lot of the time, you know, the quote will be for
the landlord and they’ll send it over the landlord and they end up paying for it or, you know, they go
halves on it and things like that. So, yeah.

Ash: And so, you know, to take that economic case to a landlord, like, how would you say it if it was
your landlord and you were renting the case?

George: The case you could really put forward is the sort of like the value that they can add to the
house if they were going to sell the house or, you know, if you if you if you were to leave the property
they could potentially bump up that rental prices because the property then benefits from having
solar.

Ash: And so, like, it’s not like, oh, I’m a renter, therefore, it doesn’t make sense for me to have solar.
It can make sense for you and your landlord. But that’s a negotiation that you have to enter into.
That’s kind of like a bit of coeducation. It feels weird and but yeah, I’m doing that now.

Jess: That’s amazing! Wait, you’re sending it to your landlord. Really?

Ash: Yes.

Jess: Ash! High five!

Ash: Well, I’ll let you know how it goes. Like, ideally, by the end of, you know, all of this, they’ll be like,
oh, yeah, dude, solar sounds like a great idea.

Jess: So there will be an upfront cost, but the Australian Federal Solar Rebate is still going. Just as
an example, a six kilowatt system will get about $3,300 in rebates as of the time we are recording.
That’s going to go down year by year as this is being slowly phased out. But there are also different
state level rebates. So when you get a quote ask what’s available for your postcode.

Ash: And once you’ve got solar panels, your electricity retailer will pay you a small amount for each
kilowatt hour you export back to the grid. And on top of that, if you use most of your power during
the day when the sun’s shining, then you’ll have cheaper bills and you could make a payback of your
system in about five years.

Jess: And one more thing, until we get to 100 percent renewable energy here in Australia, you’re still
going to be using some energy from the grid, even when you have solar panels, especially when the
sun ain’t shining. So you can switch to greenpower for the rest.

Ash: We found some really great resources for getting your head around the whole rooftop solar
thing. So we’re going to chuck them in the show notes and it’s easy as pie.

Simon Holmes à Court: But that’s kind of like the personal hygiene thing, that’s like getting out of
bed and having a shower. You’ve done the basics. That is kind of a ticket to play to be putting the
pressure for societal change or systemic change, and that’s where the heavy lifting comes in. If we
can get one one coal power unit to shut down, that has a massive impact on everyone who used to
take power from that power station.

Ash: Right. Well, I’m all about shutting down coal plants.

Jess: Oh, can I give you another reason, another reason to shut them down? So I’m going to share
my screen and show you this thing that Simon tweeted. OK, look at this. So he put together this
nifty little graph, ‘Greenhouse gas emissions for the financial year of 2019’, and check this out.
See this on the left, that giant amount, six point eight million tonnes, this is the Vales Point coal
power station. That’s just one coal power station in New South Wales. And it emits as much carbon
dioxide as the entire Australian domestic aviation sector! So, like you can see, Qantas and Virgin.

Ash: Whoa. OK, wait, hold on. That’s crazy! Six point eight million tonnes? So this is just Vales Point,
one power station?

Jess: Yeah. And just to put that into perspective, I did a carbon footprint calculator for myself and
my personal emissions is like 12 tonnes, 12 tons versus six point eight million tonnes. So from
Simon’s helpful graph, I then calculated that shutting down this one coal power plant is the same
impact as more than 560,000 me’s completely offsetting my carbon footprint. That is more than
the population of Tasmania!

Simon Holmes à Court: You might convince, you know, 20% of people to reduce their flights by
20%, but that doesn’t move the needle. What really moves the needle is when we change our power
system to use renewables rather than coal, or we change our aviation sector to use clean fuel
rather than the kerosene they currently use.

Ash: Also, the Vales Point one is only the tenth dirtiest? Excuse me!

Simon Holmes à Court: So if we can push that power station for early closure, it’s like we’ve just
taken a whole sector of emissions out of the economy. So this systemic change, you get to reduce
the carbon footprint more than you could ever do for yourself and all of your neighbors and the rest
of society at the same time.

Ash: Yes, Simon speaking our language with the systemic change! And the thing I love about this
kind of change is it’s basically easier for everyone than the alternative, either (A) we all fret forever
about every single carbon emitting decision we make, or (B) not fret, because you’re running on
renewable energy.

Jess: So we were wondering what is the easiest and fastest way to get heaps of solar onto our grid
and kick coal off our dance floor completely.

Ash: And that led us back to our buddies at Greenpeace Australia Pacific and specifically to Lindsay
Soutar. Lindsay runs REenergise, which is Greenpeace’s renewable energy campaign. And what
they’re doing is targeting the biggest polluters in Australia to get them to go renewable.

Jess: We wanted to specifically know how does the residential impact of all of us switching our
homes to renewable power stack up against big business doing the same?

Lindsay Soutar: Yeah, it’s a good question. So large corporations make up about 70% of emissions
from electricity in Australia. Even if we get every single Australian to make the switch without
getting those companies to shift as well? We’re not going as far as we need to go.

Ash + Jess: 70 per cent! 70 per cent of Australia’s emissions comes from large corporations. So
don’t be mad at yourself. Be mad at them.

Lindsay Soutar: You, of course, might be able to install 12 solar panels on your roof, whereas Aldi,
the supermarket company, has just announced that it’s rolling out a solar program with 102,000
solar panels on rooftops around the country, so on their stores and distribution centers.

Ash: OK, so a big supermarket chain like Aldi switching that power is really huge. I mean, like,
remember our dance floor story? When Aldi generates excess electricity from all those massive
supermarket rooftops covered in solar panels, they feed back into the grid and they’re helping to
push out coal.

Lindsay Soutar: So Australia’s biggest emitters have to report how much they’re polluting to the
government and that information becomes publicly available in a database. So that’s how we’ve
got this data. We’ve pulled it down off the Clean Energy Regulator’s website and trolled through it to
look at, I guess, in particular, which are the big brand companies, because they’re the ones we can’t
we know as as consumers and as members of the public that we can really have an influence over
and and the companies we’re targeting initially with this campaign.

Jess: So we’re rolling through the list of big businesses on the REenergise website right now. OK,
so that’s REenergise.org. And we’re scrolling through the list of the dirtiest businesses in Australia.
Let’s find out which companies. Lion… Oh, JB Hi-Fi!

Ash: Oh, yeah?

Jess: No, no good. Hmm, make some demands.

Ash: You would think that Apple would have done better.

Jess: So Woolworths is ranked 6th on the list of the largest electricity users in Australia. They do
have onsite solar, but they have no renewable electricity commitment.

Ash: OK, so Coles is ranked 12th. So how do we take action? So: ways to make change. You can
message a company, share the campaign, sign a petition. Easy. OK, email CEO! Oh my gosh.
There’s a link right here. Hello. OK, I’m Ash Berdebes, I am a Coles customer because you know
it’s everywhere. I’d like to know, when will Coles commit to 100 percent renewable electricity? Aldi
has committed to a hundred percent renewable energy by 2021, Telstra has committed to 100 per
percent renewable energy by 2025. What is standing in your way? Let me help you.

Jess: So listeners, we’re going to make this real easy for you. There’s a link to REenergise on our
website. You can get to it from the show notes.

Ash: I mean, if you’re working in these companies sure, you can say, I want you to go renewable,
but would they listen to us? It just feels weird being like, do you Woolworth’s? Could you please go
renewable and put lots of solar panels on your roof, then I will shop with you. Thank you very much.
Cheers. Ash and Jess.

Jess: Yeah, what’s the best way to be calling them out or asking them to make the switch?

Lindsay Soutar: I think what you’ve outlined is exactly what we want to be doing. They are very
sensitive to customer pressure and expectations, especially on issues like climate change, which
they know have been rising in public concern and public attention.

Ash: OK, so that was me doing a record scratch. It’s me. Hey, future Ash talking to past Ash, to let
you know that they did listen to us. We’ve got some good news! Since this interview with Lindsay,
Woolworths announced they’re going 100 percent renewable by 2025.

Jess: And why is this so epic? Because Woolworths represents one percent of Australia’s entire
electricity usage. They have a power bill of like over a million dollars every day. And instead of
supporting fossil fuels, soon that money will be going towards clean, renewable energy. Only two
weeks before Woolies announced this, our maate Lindsay here and David from our first episode
went along together to meet the CEO of Woolworths because thousands of people just like us
had sent a message to Brad Banducci through the REenergise website. So they have a chat
with CEO Brad about the REenergise campaign. And then two weeks later, Woolies makes this
announcement: that they’re going 100 percent renewable.

Ash: Who knows, by the time you’re listening to this podcast episode, maybe Coles will have
flicked the switch too! It shows just how quickly things can change right now. So let’s keep that
momentum going.

Jess: You can go to the REenergise website and call on Australia’s biggest electricity users to go
100 per cent renewable. It is a win for a minute.

Ash: I guess this is something that Greenpeace probably has seen a lot in the past is just knocking
on someone’s door, I mean, that’s someone being a big company who’s not doing the right thing,
is enough sometimes for them to go, oh, maybe we don’t want this kind of attention. Maybe we’ll
change ahead of time before you have to launch a campaign against what we’re doing.

Lindsay Soutar: So, yes, we absolutely are seeing companies, I guess, get trying to get ahead of
some of the attention of scrutiny. And interestingly, we were launching a renewable beer or a sun
powered beer campaign just before Christmas at the end of last year, asking Asahi and Lion, the
two other big brewers in Australia, to match Carlton and United, who’s the third big brewer who had
already made the commitment to 100 percent renewable electricity. And so we had a whole lot of
little coasters printed that we were going to be distributing in pubs and stickers that were going
on, you know, cases of beer in bottle shops all around the country. But we never got to use any of
it because in the end, once we told the company that these, you know, all these volunteers were
going out all around the country with with these stickers and posters, those big companies were
like, oh actually, you know, we can say this makes sense what you’re asking us to do. We’re already
on this path. We’re already investing in renewable energy. Let’s just go the whole way to 100 percent
renewables. And so they ultimately decided to make the commitment before we even really got
going!

Ash + Jess: Oh, that’s so good!

Lindsay Soutar: I mean, but I think it also speaks to how doable this is. Like it is it is now at a point
where switching to renewable electricity for these companies does just make sense.

Jess: So Christmas 2020, one of the silver linings will be we can have sun-powered beer?

Lindsay Soutar: So by 2025, all beer in Australia will be 100 percent renewable powered. So these
companies have made the commitment to make the switch, to make the transition. But that’s not
something that can just happen overnight. They have to do the work to, you know, sign those deals
with the wind and solar farms and get all those solar panels up on their facilities. That takes a bit
of time, but certainly making that commitment and sending that clear signal about where they’re
going as a company and also where the world is heading is is really important.

Ash: I’m looking forward to sinking a few frothies with a clean conscience!

Jess: Speaking of solar powered beer, Lindsey gave us a pretty great solution for people who are
locked out of rooftop solar, like us, who are renters or people who live in apartments and have small
rooftops or who don’t get a lot of sun… and the solution involves beer!

Ash: So Lindsay’s a renter just like us, and she has invested in a solar community project on the
rooftop of a brewery in Sydney called Young Henry’s.

Jess: These community projects – that are sometimes called solar gardens – basically work like
a community vegie garden. You can buy a plot of panels in a huge community solar farm and,
you know, they’re an awesome way for local businesses with large rooftops, like this brewery,
to make the most out of them. The local community get the financial benefits of solar and any
excess energy from the solar gardens gets fed back into the grid. You get dividends, in the case
of this Young Henry’s Brewery, or in the case of things like solar gardens, you get savings on your
electricity bill just the way you would if you had your own rooftop solar. So we’re going to chuck a
little link on the Heaps Better website and in the show notes of this episode so that wherever you
are in Australia, you can check out what’s happening around you. And if you too are locked out of
rooftop solar, you can still get a slice of the pie.

Jess: Hi, Richard, how are you doing?

Ash: Where are we Jess?

Jess: Well, Ash, we’re sipping on a delicious solar powered beer at the Young Henry’s Brewery in
Sydney, that one with the community solar project that we’ve invested in.

Ash: And we’re walking through the back of the brewery with the owner, Richard Adamson, past
these giant vats of green algae that grown from the CO2 from the brewing process.

Jess: Richard tells us that each batch of algae here produces the same amount of oxygen as a
hectare of forest. So thanks to this algae and the solar panels, the brewery is aiming to be carbon
negative.

Ash: Jess really loves seaweed, but we’re here to talk about solar.

Jess: Is it expensive for you as a business to have done this? I know it gives dividends back to the
community who’ve invested in it, but as a business has it been costly?

Richard Adamson: That was the beauty of it, that there was actually no upfront cost on our part.
We just signed an agreement that we would lease the space over the period, I think it’s 10 years,
and that was it. I think that money is much better in generating electricity now than it is probably
getting interest out of the bank because the interest rates are so low. So even my dad is a bit of a
skeptic, and he has gone OK, I’m putting solar panels on the roof. It’s like, wow, that’s amazing!

Jess: I love that. I want to get my Dad to put solar panels on his roof! That’s my goal.

Richard Adamson: I mean, I think if you put the economic case to him he might just go, well, alright!
Because that’s where it stands at the moment. It does make more financial sense to invest your
money in solar panels for, you know, for home generation.

Ash: I was sort of surprised that Young Henry’s was doing so much, but then I thought again and I
was like, oh, well, like being a brewer is just kind of like being a scientist, but you get to wear like a
T-shirt rather than a white coat.

Richard Adamson: Yes! I did say to my science teacher from high school, if I knew I’d be using
all this science in brewing, I might have paid more attention! We’ve had some we had a science
teacher bring these students down to say, hey, look, these guys use science every day. There’s a full
lab up upstairs but they’ve just got tattoos and beers and look really cool! So maybe, maybe that’s
why you should pay attention in class! And I was like, that’s cool.

Ash: Okay, that’s a real cool teacher. Imagine your teacher taking you on an excursion to a solar
powered brewery.

Jess: Yeah, kind of reminds me of a solar powered kinder from the beginning of this episode that
you were going to tell me more about Ash.

Ash: I didn’t forget! OK, so let’s bring Jenny Whelan back.

Jenny Whelan: We talk at the Kinder a lot about curious questions, it’s like an ongoing thing. What’s
the curious question? And I just really encourage everyone to just keep asking those curious
questions, like why do our schools not have solar panels on every roof? Why would we build a
school today without a full solar installation on the rooftop? And it’s not just thinking about making
that specific school sustainable. We’re thinking beyond that. We’re thinking of, what can happen
when, as a Sustainable Schools Alliance, our roof is covered with solar panels and then we unite
that energy, combine that energy and then deliver it to our communities in term break?

Jess: Oh, I love this story so much.

Ash: Right? And the cool thing is the kids are going home and talking about solar panels and
renewables to their parents, so that message is spreading into the community and encouraging
everyone to ask these big questions, like, if the kids know what’s up, why haven’t we done this
already?

Jenny Whelan: Action is a great panacea for anxiety, and that’s why I think we’ve got to show our
kids that there’s things that we can all do, there’s numbers between 1 and 10 and they can make a
difference without having to march to Parliament House to do it. There’s just a lot of things that we
can do, particularly within a school setting, because you actually you’ve got hundreds and hundreds
of young adults and you’ve got teachers that are passionate to support the voices of those
students. And you’ve also got a connection with hundreds of families, and through that connection
with hundreds of families, you’ve got a connection with hundreds of workplaces. So the capacity
for schools to show leadership and transform how we live in our homes and how we work in our
businesses, it’s very powerful. There’s a great opportunity there. And I think it’s important not to
miss the opportunity.

Isla: On Monday I cleaned up the park!

Ash: Really? You know what, thank you for cleaning up the park. Some people leave things behind
and make things dirty and other people make things better and you’re making things better.

Jess: Ash, I refuse to leave it to the three year olds to clean up our parks and our backyards and our
atmosphere. Can we kick dirty old coal off our dance floor?

Ash: Yes! I mean, I don’t think we have a choice not to anymore. So what are we going to do?
We’re going to go back to our renewables 101. Get solar panels on your roof! You can look into
community solar gardens if you can’t do the whole rooftop solar thing.

Jess: You know how I was going to try and convince my Dad to get solar panels on his roof? Well,
he got wind of my plan and he and Mum started doing the research themselves.

Ash: Oh he got wind of it, did he? Was that a renewable energy pun?

Jess: It was an accident, I swear! But he’s getting it done, which is cool!

Ash: I think I’ll pass that on to my Mum. OK. Then think bigger picture, go right for those big
polluting businesses that are responsible for 70% of our electricity emissions. You can go to
reenergise.org and call them out to flick that switch. Greenpeace has literally done all the hard yards
for you, so this is now the easiest action.

Jess: And if you’re feeling really gung ho, then channel Albert Park kinda or the Young Henry’s
brewery and get your workplace, school, university, whatever, to flick the switch to renewable power.
All those things will get more fun, renewable dancers onto our dancefloor grid and kick old fuddy
duddy coal out.

Ash: The power is ours! and one final word from our future PM:

Will: Solar panels save the world!

Jess: To make this hella easy for you, the Greenpeace team have put together a step by step action
plan. It’s on the website at greenpeace.org.au. Everything you need is in there, and there’s a link
in the show notes too. Ash, I got another big tip from Simon Holmes à Court that I was holding
off telling you. He said that one of the biggest things that we can do to stop coal and fossil fuel
projects is actually to switch our banking in super.

Ash: Oh… I’ve been meaning to do that, but it seems like a big effort.

Jess: In the next episode, we’re going to work out whether our money is actually financing the
climate crisis and if it is, how we can fix that stat and use it as a tool for good, instead.

Ash: Subscribe to Heaps Better on Spotify, Apple or wherever you listen. And if you like what you
heard, please write and review this podcast, it’s a huge help!

Jess: Heaps Better is a podcast made by us, Jess Hamilton and Ash Berdebes, with Greenpeace
Australia Pacific and Audiocraft by our side. The mixing engineer is Adam Conolley, EP is Kate
Montague and the Creative Lead at Greenpeace is Ella Colley.

Ash: We acknowledge and pay respects to the traditional custodians of the lands this podcast was
created, and their enduring legacy of sustainability and caring for country. A huge thank you to the
Greenpeace team for getting us out of the weeds and showing us the bigger picture, especially
Lindsay and the team behind the REenergise campaign and the Dirty Power doco.

Jess: Thank you to Simon Holmes à Court and the many experts who wrote books, papers and
guides that helped us make sense of all of this and who are all chipping away every day to bring on
the renewable revolution.

Ash: And thanks to Jenny and Lesley from Albert Park Kinder and of course, to Will and Isla for
cleaning up our parks and dreaming big. With kids like you, we know the future is in good hands.
And thank you for coming with us! Together we are heaps better.

]]>
Greenpeace welcomes Australia joining Global Ocean Alliance https://www.greenpeace.org.au/news/greenpeace-welcomes-australia-joining-global-ocean-alliance/ Wed, 17 Feb 2021 00:00:00 +0000 https://www-dev.greenpeace.org/australiapacific/article/greenpeace-welcomes-australia-joining-global-ocean-alliance/ MELBOURNE, Feb 17, 2021 – The Australian Federal Government has taken an important step towards global ocean protection by joining almost 40 other countries in the Global Oceans Alliance, which calls for 30% of the ocean to be protected by 2030.

This target is crucial in order to safeguard wildlife and to help mitigate the impacts of climate change, and involves developing a network of Marine Protected Areas all over the world.

“From climate change to ocean acidification, overfishing and pollution, our oceans are under threat like never before,” said Greenpeace Australia Pacific spokesperson Nelli Stevenson.

“Our spectacular ocean wildlife is being harmed at an alarming rate through the unbelievable pressure being put on our oceans.”

“Protecting 30% of the world’s oceans by 2030 is a crucial step to not only ensuring that our oceans are protected from the worsening impacts of climate change, but that marine wildlife is protected from poaching, overfishing, and habitat destruction.”

“This is an important move by the Australian Federal Government, however, if it is serious about protecting our oceans it must also tackle the mining and burning of coal, oil and gas – key drivers of climate change which is already devastating our Great Barrier Reef and Tasmanian kelp forests at home in Australia.”

Notes

Download the “30×30: A Blueprint for Ocean Protection” report here – a collaboration between Greenpeace and leading academics at the University of York and University of Oxford

Download captivating ocean images here

Contact

Greenpeace Australia Pacific Communications Campaigner, Martin Zavan

0424 295 422

martin.zavan@greenpeace.org

]]>
Shoppers urge Coles to become a greener grocer: new poll https://www.greenpeace.org.au/news/shoppers-urge-coles-to-become-a-greener-grocer-new-poll/ Mon, 07 Dec 2020 00:00:00 +0000 https://www-dev.greenpeace.org/australiapacific/article/shoppers-urge-coles-to-become-a-greener-grocer-new-poll/ Melbourne, 8 December 2020 – Australians want Coles to become a greener grocer, with a new poll showing that nearly three quarters of Aussie shoppers want the supermarket chain to switch to 100% renewable electricity.

Coles is the only major Australian supermarket that has not yet made the full switch to 100% renewable electricity, following recent commitments by Woolworths and ALDI to source all of their electricity needs from renewable energy by 2025.

The polling, carried out by UComms and commissioned by Greenpeace Australia Pacific, found that 73.4% of respondents  think Coles should follow Woolworths and commit to 100% renewables.

Over 55% of respondents also said they would be more likely to buy a product from a retailer that sourced its electricity from 100% renewable sources.

Lindsay Soutar, Director of REenergise, a Greenpeace Australia Pacific campaign to encourage big businesses to switch to 100% renewable energy, said that the poll results were a clear message to Coles that it’s time to flick the switch on the energy transition.

“The message from Australian shoppers is loud and clear – they want Coles to commit to 100% renewable energy, like its supermarket rivals Woolworths and ALDI,” she said.

“Coles is already running 30% of its operations on renewable energy and it wouldn’t take long for them to take the lead in the supermarket race to renewables.”

“This year we’ve seen some of Australia’s biggest businesses, from Bunnings to Telstra, commit to 100% renewable energy. It’s time for Coles to up their ambition in the retail renewables revolution – or risk being left behind.”

Coles has already made significant steps towards cleaner power, signing two major deals with wind and solar farms in NSW and QLD – enough to cover 30% of the company’s electricity consumption. Its deal with Queensland’s state-owned clean energy retailer CleanCo means its QLD stores and distribution will soon be run on 90% renewable electricity. 

Coles going fully renewable would bring a staggering 571 MW of new wind and solar online, enough to power all the homes in Tasmania, creating 1584 jobs. The commitment would have a major impact on Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions – the supermarket is Australia’s 12th largest energy user, consuming around 1% of the country’s electricity. 

Shopper Lisa Edinburg said that the renewable energy and climate commitments played an important factor in her purchasing decisions.

“As a shopper, and a parent of young children, I want to know that brands I support are working to create a safer future for my family – it definitely plays a role in my shopping decisions. Your move, Coles.”

Greenpeace Australia Pacific is calling on Coles to commit to 100% renewable electricity and to sign up to the global RE100 initiative by the end of 2020. 

ENDS

]]>
Tasmania proves 100% renewable is 100% doable https://www.greenpeace.org.au/news/tasmania-proves-100-renewable-is-100-doable/ Fri, 27 Nov 2020 00:00:00 +0000 https://www-dev.greenpeace.org/australiapacific/article/tasmania-proves-100-renewable-is-100-doable/ SYDNEY, November 27 2020 –  In response to Tasmania officially reaching 100% renewable energy, Greenpeace spokesperson Nelli Stevenson said:“This epic milestone achieved in Tasmania proves that 100% renewable is 100% doable.

“States and territories are surging ahead in the renewable energy race, leaving the Federal Government more and more isolated in its inaction on climate change.

“Federal Governments are supposed to lead, and right now Australians are more than ever being let down by their elected Federal representatives while state leadership gets on with the job of moving Australia to safe and reliable renewable energy.

For more information please contact Head of Communications Nelli Stevenson on 0481 303 815 or email nelli.stevenson@greenpeace.org

]]>
Replacing Liddell with Renewables Cheaper and Less Polluting than Gas https://www.greenpeace.org.au/article/replacing-liddell-with-renewables-cheaper-and-less-polluting-than-gas/ Thu, 26 Nov 2020 13:00:00 +0000 https://www-dev.greenpeace.org/australiapacific/article/replacing-liddell-with-renewables-cheaper-and-less-polluting-than-gas/ Greenpeace launches the report: Scenarios for the Replacement of the Liddell Power Station Report
The cheapest and lowest emissions option to replace the Liddell coal-burning power station in the New South Wales Hunter Valley is clean energy backed up by batteries, according to a new report by energy analytics firm RepuTex.

NEWSFLASH|nsw electricty prices gif 2|Untitled design-2|Untitled design
|||

New modelling undertaken by consultancy Reputex, and commissioned by Greenpeace Australia Pacific has shown the cheapest and lowest emissions option to replace Liddell is clean energy backed up by storage. 

One of Australia’s oldest coal-burning power stations, Liddell in the New South Wales Hunter Valley, is set for closure by April 2023 and needs to be replaced. At 49 years of age, Liddell is now significantly beyond its engineering lifetime and carries heavy maintenance costs. 

The furore over the closure of the Liddell is emblematic of this politically fabricated problem. How Liddell is replaced will have a huge impact on NSW’s energy supply, and on Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions. 

In September this year, the Morrison government threatened to build a new 1000MW gas-fired power plant to replace Liddell if the energy sector didn’t produce 1000MW of dispatchable power by April 2021.

For months now, Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Energy Minister Angus Taylor have been unjustifiably fear-mongering around the closure. Despite the best advice of economists, scientists and energy industry experts, the Morrison Government is advocating that Australia replaces coal with gas. 

The RepuTex report compared the results of the NSW government’s just-legislated electricity infrastructure plan that will see the creation of a number of renewable energy zones with that of the Morrison government, which wants to see Liddell replaced with a gas power station.

Renewables Cheaper than Gas

Despite the Morrison government’s commitment to fossil fuels, Australia is harnessing the opportunities offered by the clean energy revolution.

In response to market forces and the climate crisis, Coalition Governments in South Australia, Tasmania and New South Wales have set targets to replace ageing and unreliable coal-burning power stations with cheaper and reliable renewable energy.

But cheaper, cleaner, more reliable energy and future-proof jobs is not a goal of the federal Coalition Government.

After years of sitting on their hands and extending the life of the old Hunter clunker, the Federal Government needs to find a solution, fast. And it’s backing another fossil fuel despite overwhelming evidence supporting the business and environmental case for renewables. 

Greenpeace Australia Pacific Head of Research and Investigations, Dr Nikola Casule said the Reputex report builds on growing evidence that clean energy should be at the centre of federal energy policy, driven by the declining cost and increasing reliability of renewables. 

“This new report shows conclusively that renewable energy is the best option for replacing Australia’s coal-burning power stations. Building new gas infrastructure is an expensive, unnecessary diversion that won’t reduce emissions. Replacing coal with gas is like replacing a typewriter with a fax machine – they’re both obsolete technologies that no longer meet Australia’s energy needs.”

The Reputex report shows that replacing the ageing and unreliable Hunter Valley power station with renewables backed up by batteries is 17% cheaper than replacing Liddell with gas and will result in fewer emissions.

Renewables are cleaner than Gas

Replacing Liddell with renewable energy will see NSW wholesale electricity prices $7 per MWh lower than under the Federal Government’s proposed gas replacement plan.

It’s also the best option for reducing emissions, with the modelling showing the renewable energy solution would see NSW emissions fall to 34 per cent below 2005 levels. 

“Renewables firmed with storage solves the so-called ‘energy trilemma’ — affordable, reliable and cleaner power. This report demonstrates that by continuing to add renewables and storage to NSW’s grid, the state will enjoy reliable power that’s cheaper and much better for the environment than gas,” senior advisor to the Climate and Energy College at Melbourne University, Simon Holmes à Court said.

Angus Taylor needs to scrutinise this report and learn the lessons from it. All week he has demanded to see the modelling that underpins NSW Energy Minister att Kean’s energy policy. Now that he has it, he can’t bear to look at it.

It’s the modelling Angus Taylor ‘wants’ but can’t afford to see because it pours water on his desire for a gas-led recovery and proves, once again, that renewable energy and batteries are the cheapest, cleanest and safest way to replace coal. 

By following the lead set by Coalition states governments like NSW and South Australia and backing renewable energy, Angus Taylor and Federal Government can make Australia a clean energy superpower, and create future-proof jobs for Australian workers.

The solutions are already out there, all we need is for Angus Taylor to come to the light.

Read the Report here.

]]>
Your lungs will thank you for switching to clean energy https://www.greenpeace.org.au/article/your-lungs-will-thank-you-for-switching-to-clean-energy/ Sun, 23 Aug 2020 14:00:00 +0000 https://www-dev.greenpeace.org/australiapacific/article/your-lungs-will-thank-you-for-switching-to-clean-energy/ Covid-19 has brought normal life all over the world to a virtual halt. With fewer cars on the roads and industry scaling down their operations, the skies have cleared, leading many to question just how much pollution we were breathing in during the “normal times”.
Greenpeace’s new scientific report, Lethal Power: How Burning Coal Kills People in Australia, goes some way to quantifying the damage and it paints an alarming picture.

 

Greenpeace volunteers in the Sydney CBD handed out dust masks as the air quality index soared to levels 10-25 times higher than World Health Organisation guidelines.

Every year, air pollution from Australia’s coal-burning power stations is responsible for 800 premature deaths, 14,000 asthma symptoms among children and 850 cases of low birth weight in newborns, according to the report.

And it’s worth noting that the death and illness outlined in our report were not caused by some Chernobyl like mishap. Death and disease are the byproducts of burning coal for electricity, by design.

The tragic fact of the matter is that people all over Australia are paying for electricity with their lives and health, even if they don’t get electricity from burning coal or live near a power station. 

While the risk of harmful health impacts are closer near power stations, the deadly effects of burning coal travel far beyond the communities that house those dirty and outdated power stations. Up to 22 percent of cases of low birth weight in newborns occur in states and territories that are not home to the source of the emissions. Coal burning power stations spread death and disease over areas spanning hundreds of kilometres. That means people in Sydney and even Queensand are breathing in toxic chemicals produced as far away as the Hunter Valley.

As the name suggests, air pollution is as omnipresent as the air itself. Everywhere at once yet invisible.

But just because we can’t see air pollution (sometimes we can) doesn’t mean we can’t fight it.

Australia still operates twenty-two coal-burning power stations, some of which are among the oldest and most polluting in the world. As shocking as it sounds, power stations in Australia are more loosely controlled by governments and pollute more than those in China.

Part of the reason is that Australian governments haven’t conducted any research into the health impacts of burning coal, apart from a NSW Health study that was only released a few months ago. But now that governments know about the deadly legacy of coal they have no excuse not to act.

A good start would be to consider if we even need to burn coal for electricity anymore. The simple answer is no. A number of local examples show that within a relatively short timespan we can generate all the electricity we need from clean sources like the sun and wind backed up by battery storage. The ACT is already at 100% renewables as are the City of Sydney and the City of Newcastle. Tasmania is on track to be powered by 100% renewables in just 2 years and South Australia will meet its 100% renewable target early. The energy market operator’s recently published Integrated System Plan conservatively forecasts that Australia can run on 100% renewables by 2040 whereas other studies have shown it can be done in less than ten years.

As well as saving lives, replacing coal with clean energy would save money on electricity bills. Ageing coal-burning power stations like Liddell are operating well past their design lives and aren’t able to reliably meet our energy needs due to regular blackouts. 

Research by the Australia Institute has found that a coal power station boiler fails every two and a half days on average, destabilising the grid, causing blackouts and price spikes. Coal is starting to pose serious problems for a much more distributed, diverse and consumer-friendly electricity system. With enough renewable energy and storage, we can provide far more energy than we actually use and create new export markets in renewables that create tens of thousands of future-proof jobs. 

Governments of all stripes must now come up with a plan to ensure coal is replaced with renewable energy as quickly as possible, with regional plans to prepare communities for the economic adjustment. In the meantime, Australian power stations should be legally required to install chemical scrubbers like the vast majority of those in China, the EU and the US. Making scrubbers compulsory would save thousands of lives and lungs before the last power station closes.

Dealing with this invisible killer will help Australia emerge from the pandemic, stimulate the economy by providing future-proof jobs for years to come while protecting public health. It seems like a no-brainer for anyone who is on “Team Australia”. 

]]>
Equinor Bights the dust! https://www.greenpeace.org.au/article/equinor-bights-the-dust/ Tue, 25 Feb 2020 13:00:00 +0000 https://www-dev.greenpeace.org/australiapacific/article/equinor-bights-the-dust/ We did it! Norwegian oil giant Equinor has ditched its outrageous plans to drill for oil in the Great Australian Bight!  

Making Oil History Community Flotilla in Apollo Bay, Australia|Reject Teck Mine Petition Delivery to the Prime Minister of Canada|Reject Teck Mine Petition Delivery to the Prime Minister of Canada
A student-led flotilla including kayaks, sailboats, paddle boards, and surfboards set sail in Apollo Bay Harbour to send a message to oil companies that they are not welcome to drill in the Great Australian Bight.
The flotilla was organised by a 15-year-old student from nearby Apollo Bay College.
The event coincided with the Rainbow Warrior’s visit to the town, as part of the Making Oil History ship tour. Over the coming months, the Rainbow Warrior will investigate, document, and showcase Australia’s most unsung treasure – Great Australian Bight – to the entire country and the rest of the world in preparation for the battle against oil drilling.|Greenpeace Canada Executive Director Christy Ferguson, with her two-and-a-half year-old son William in her arms, delivers a personal and heartfelt message to the Prime Minister’s Office. She asks Trudeau to protect her son and future generations from climate change and delivers Greenpeace’s share of more than 100,000 signatures environmental groups have collected asking Cabinet to reject the Teck Frontier tar sands mine.

Ferguson also gifted Trudeau a selection of children’s books hand-picked by herself and other mothers at Greenpeace, to remind him of that basic values and simple choice between right and wrong at the root of the decision on the future of the Teck mine.|Greenpeace Canada Executive Director Christy Ferguson, with her two-and-a-half year-old son William in her arms, delivers a personal and heartfelt message to the Prime Minister’s Office. She asks Trudeau to protect her son and future generations from climate change and delivers Greenpeace’s share of more than 100,000 signatures environmental groups have collected asking Cabinet to reject the Teck Frontier tar sands mine.

Ferguson also gifted Trudeau a selection of children’s books hand-picked by herself and other mothers at Greenpeace, to remind him of that basic values and simple choice between right and wrong at the root of the decision on the future of the Teck mine.

As the news rippled around our office in Sydney yesterday, we felt energised. Days like this don’t come that often. They re-charge us, keep us going. And remind us of our immense power. Enjoy it! High five a friend, drink it in, and just feel good. And share it on Facebook and Twitter

Let’s not underplay this: it’s a HUGE win…

For the First Nations people who have called this area home for more than 60,000 years. For the tight-knit coastal communities whose way of life had been at risk. For the unique and magical marine life threatened like never before. For the fishing and tourism industries who depend on a clean and healthy Bight.

And for the hundreds of thousands of people like you, who stood with them, and spoke up. You made this happen.

Whale and calf

A whale and her calf in the Great Australian Bight.

Together, we can achieve the impossible. We’ve taken on the biggest fossil fuel companies, and we’ve won. But we need your support to keep going.

Will you chip in to power this incredible movement, and make sure that we can keep fighting to permanently protect the Bight, and to take on the fossil fuel industry?

CHIP IN NOW

This is a momentous win for the Bight, for South Australia and for all our friends in this amazing movement of people. This is what we can do when we band together.

Protecting the Bight is so important. Not only is it one of the world’s most important whale sanctuaries, home to more unique species than the Great Barrier Reef, but it houses an estimated 817 million tonnes of carbon that we simply cannot afford to burn if we’re to avoid the worst impacts of climate change. 

For years now, it has been the people vs oil. And the people have just won, again. Faced with aggressive deepwater oil drilling threatening one of the world’s most unique marine ecosystems, surrounded by majestic whales and baby seals, we knew Australians wouldn’t stand for it. And we didn’t. 

Our movement stepped up. And when the setbacks came, we didn’t stop. We built the kind of relentless community pressure that no major corporation, or their investors, could ignore. 

South Australian community representatives and activists tell Equinor their oil rigs are not welcome in the Great Australian Bight.

The battle to protect the Bight permanently is not won yet. The only way to do that is to secure a permanent moratorium on drilling. If we can do that, we can safeguard coastal communities and the Bight’s unique marine life for good.

We’ll keep fighting until that’s a reality. But this victory is a huge step forward, and a message to any other greedy oil giants foolish enough to try and drill the Bight that they will face fierce opposition. 

With your support we can lock in permanent protection for the Bight, and keep fighting, and winning, these pivotal battles against the fossil fuel industry. 

CHIP IN NOW to fund our people-powered movement!

We’ve been a thorn in the side of the oil industry and the reckless plans to drill the Bight for years now. First we sent BP packing. Then Chevron and Karoon. And now Equinor has become the latest major company to see the writing on the wall in the face of unwavering local resistance. 

We know that oil drilling in the Bight would be disastrous. A spill could hit anywhere from Western Australia to Tasmania, devastating marine life and local people.

Equinor’s own modelling showed that an oil spill in the Bight could hit the coastline anywhere from WA to northern NSW.

That’s why we won’t stop until a permanent moratorium on oil drilling in this incredible place has been declared.

We also know that Big Oil isn’t about to stop. Driven by greed and desperation, they’ll continue to try and wring the last drops out of this dying industry. But we have them on the run. From the Arctic to the Bight, the tide is turning. And just yesterday the plug was pulled on a huge oilsands mine in Canada, with concerns over climate change proving pivotal. The end of the fossil fuel age is coming.

The momentum is with us. Let’s keep it going!

We’re completely independent, which means we rely on the generosity of people like you to power huge wins for the environment like today’s. We’ve also shown that together, we can do anything.

Chip in now to help protect beautiful ecosystems like the Bight for good.

Thank you again for speaking out, and for standing alongside everyone fighting for the Bight! You’re part of something truly special today. 

This has been an enormous win fought over many many years, and has taken so many of us. This list doesn’t capture everyone, but here are just a few specific extra thank yous: 

  • Aunty Sue Haseldine, Uncle Bunna Lawrie Kokotha and Mirning Elders
  • The people of Ceduna, Kangaroo Island, Port Lincoln and the 23 local councils that publicly opposed drilling
  • The fishing communities of South Australia
  • The Great Australian Bight Alliance
  • The Wilderness Society
]]>
Seismic blasting inquiry should lead to permanent ban on offshore oil drilling https://www.greenpeace.org.au/news/seismic-blasting-inquiry-should-lead-to-permanent-ban-on-offshore-oil-drilling/ Tue, 17 Sep 2019 00:00:00 +0000 https://www-dev.greenpeace.org/australiapacific/article/seismic-blasting-inquiry-should-lead-to-permanent-ban-on-offshore-oil-drilling/ SYDNEY, Sept 17 2019 – Greenpeace welcomes the Senate’s decision to examine the impact of seismic blasting on Australia’s fisheries and the marine environment in response to demands from scientists, conservationists, and the fishing and tourism sectors.Yesterday every party in the Senate, except the Coalition and Cory Bernardi, voted to put jobs in the seafood and tourism industries before the profits of foreign oil companies by supporting the inquiry.

Greenpeace Australia Pacific Senior Campaigner Nathaniel Pelle said the move was a positive one, as the harmful impacts of seismic blasting on marine life were well established.

“Research has proven that seismic blasting kills crustaceans like lobsters, shellfish, and plankton and may also cause death to animals like dolphins and whales that rely on sonar for navigation,” Mr Pelle said.

“It’s beyond doubt that seismic testing is dangerous and deadly, the Senate inquiry recognises the fact that we just don’t know exactly what impact it may be having on our environment and industries that rely on a healthy ocean. 

“The government cannot allow oil companies to conduct activities that it knows are not only unsafe but lethal to wildlife –  in the last year it has approved seismic blasting in whale hotspots like the Great Australian Bight and off the coast of Sydney and Newcastle.”

Seismic surveys typically involve ships towing an air gun that fires a pulse of sound every 8-12 seconds. Noise from a single seismic airgun survey can blanket an area of over 300,000 km2, raising background noise levels 100-fold (20 dB), continuously for weeks or months. 

Mr Pelle said commercial fishers and tourism operators across Australia would also welcome the inquiry, which they have repeatedly called for in light of studies showing the impact of seismic blasting on marine life.

He said it was crucial that the committee held its hearings in the locations where industries are most impacted like Newcastle, Port Lincoln, Tasmania, Bass Strait and the Otway Basin.

A recent Australian study found that seismic activity can impair rock lobsters’ ability to evade predators [1] which follows groundbreaking Australian research that the blasting kills scallops and plankton.

The lobster study, conducted by the Research by the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies in Hobart and Curtin University in Western Australia, found that seismic blasting damaged lobsters’ statocysts, which impacted their ability to right themselves after being flipped over.

“Seismic blasting poses a deadly threat to marine life and could jeopardise the viability of fishing and tourism businesses all around Australia,” he said.

“Australian scientists are leading research into seismic but we still don’t know the population impacts on important commercial species. To encourage further seismic activity in the absence of the knowledge of its impacts on species like rock lobsters, would demonstrate that the regulator is as reckless with the livelihoods of families, who depend on fishing jobs, as it is with the lives of sea creatures.”

 

Notes

[1] https://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2019-07-26/rock-lobsters-impacted-by-seismic-surveys/11343240

 

Contact

Greenpeace Australia Pacific Communications Campaigner, Martin Zavan

0424 295 422

martin.zavan@greenpeace.org

]]>