Top UN official calls for Australia to urgently dump coal
The United Nationsâ top climate official has urged Australia to have a âmore honest and rational conversationâ about urgently abandoning coal power, which he said was in the nationâs and the worldâs best interests.
Selwin Hart, UN Assistant Secretary-General and Special Adviser to the Secretary-General on Climate Action, said wealthy nations must stop using coal power by 2030 and the rest of the world must dump it by 2040 if the world is to keep global warming to within the agreed target of 1.5 degrees Celsius.
Polandâs Belchatow plant is the worldâs largest lignite coal-fired power station. Credit:Getty
âMarket forces alone show coalâs days are numbered, as many investors increasingly abandon it in favour of renewables, which are now cheaper in most places,â said Mr Hart during a speech recorded for an Australian National University leadership forum.
âWe fully understand the role that coal and other fossil fuels have played in Australiaâs economy, even if mining accounts for a small fraction - around 2 per cent - of overall jobs.
âBut itâs essential to have a broader, more honest and rational conversation about what is in Australiaâs interests because the bottom line is clear.
âIf the world does not rapidly phase out coal, climate change will wreak havoc right across the Australian economy: from agriculture to tourism, and right across the services sector,â he said.
Mr Hart also called on Australia to increase its 2030 greenhouse gas emissions reduction target from the current commitment of 26 to 28 per cent, saying collectively the world must reduce emissions by 45 per cent by the end of the decade if we are to hold warming to 1.5 degrees.
And he called on Australia to adopt a net zero target by 2050, noting that all Australian states and territories had already done so, as well as Australiaâs island nation neighbours, along with nations representing 73 per cent of the worldâs economy.
The federal government has said its preference is to reach net zero before 2050, but it has not made a formal commitment to reaching the target.
Mr Hartâs speech comes as high-level calls to end the worldâs thermal coal industry intensify in the lead up to the COP26 climate talks in Glasgow in November, and are likely to be raised during the United Nations General Assembly later this month.
Alok Sharma, the Conservative United Kingdom cabinet minister who is to be the formal host of COP26 has spent much of his time in recent months travelling the world in a diplomatic push to have countries agree to a timeline to end coal use.
âIf we are serious about 1.5°C, Glasgow must be the COP that consigns coal to history ⦠we are working directly with governments, and through international organisations to end international coal financing,â he said in a speech in May.
âThe days of coal providing the cheapest form of power are in the past. And in the past they must remain ⦠The coal business is going up in smoke. Itâs old technology. So letâs make COP26 the moment we leave it in the past where it belongs.â
In his speech for the ANU Mr Hart said the nation faced increased droughts, heatwaves, fires and floods, while Pacific island nations could be âwiped from the mapâ by climate change.
âMass relocations of entire national populations would be among the catastrophic results.â
A spokeswoman for Energy and Emissions Reduction Minister Angus Taylor said that Mr Hart was, âright to point out that action and achievement this decade matter more than future aspirations and ambition.â
âAustralia has a strong 2030 target and a clear plan to meet and beat it.
âBy contrast, Labor have no 2030 target and no plan to achieve their 2050 aspiration.â
A spokesman for the Energy Council of Australia said the group was on record as supporting net zero by 2050.
The chief executive of the Minerals Council of Australia, Tania Constable, said its members supported the Paris Agreement and the transition to a net zero economy, and were accelerating exploration for metals and minerals needed for new zero emission technologies.
âMining directly employs 256,000 â" triple the number 20 years ago â" and the mining and METS [mining, equipment, technology and related services] sector directly employs 480,000 people, indirectly employs 650,000 through purchases from other sectors, and in total supports 1.1 million jobs, or 10.8 per cent of national employment,â she said.
Nick O'Malley is National Environment and Climate Editor for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age. He is also a senior writer and a former US correspondent.Connect via email.