Re: Strong and effective climate change policy, that doesn't involve a great, big new
Some salient facts:
-97% of CO2 emissions are from non-human sources
-Australia emits about 1.5% of human induced CO2 emissions
-We are planning to cut our emissions by 5%
3%*1.5%*5*= a 0.00225% reduction in global emissions
Now clearly this percentage is tiny, and such a 'cut' will have little impact on atmospheric dynamics.
-cetiris paribus, the average global temperature will be virtually uneffective.
But, as expected, you rightwing bible-thumping proles fail to grasp the fundemental question, i.e. are the benifits greater than the costs?
Lets consider the benifits,
Some include: an increased probability the world will act, a comparitive advatage in the production of carbon-neutral technologies, decreased reliance on middle eastern oil, superior air quality, investment certainty..etc
Now (assuming the rest of the world acts*) the costs:
Transition costs.
*I think this assumption is valid when we consider the targets already set by the EU, USA, China, etc. Allthough they may not act within the next 5 years, the question is whether they act eventually, something that most people consider highly probable. Now when these major countries 'put a price on carbon', we know they are going to begin to impose tarifs on imports from 'carbon-dirty' countries, this will lead to smaller, developing, exporter economies to adopt a 'carbon price'..
Soon all countries will have some kind of carbon-reduction policy in place, and inevitablly some global carbon trading framework will emerge.
So lets weight up our two choices.
-Act now= Good
-Act when big countries act=neutral
-Do not act at all=forced to act in the future=bad
Key points for TAFE rednecks to take away:
-We are going to have to 'put a price on carbon' at some stage in the future (due to global tarifs on developed 'dirty-carbon' countries)
-The longer we delay, the higher the costs of such a transition