‘Chattering classes’: Australian government dismisses UN secretary general’s 
climate criticism

António Guterres (UN) says coal is a ‘stupid investment’ that will lead to 
billions in stranded assets

Australian Associated Press  Tue 22 Mar 2022  
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2022/mar/22/un-secretary-general-calls-australia-a-holdout-for-refusing-to-do-more-to-cut-emissions


The Australian government has brushed off criticism from the UN secretary 
general labelling it a “holdout” after Scott Morrison refused to strengthen the 
nation’s 2030 emissions reduction target.

The communications minister, Paul Fletcher, branded António Guterres a member 
of the UN “chattering classes” after he used an address to a sustainability 
summit to take an extraordinary public swipe at Australia’s climate efforts.

“A growing number of G20 developed economies have announced meaningful 
emissions reductions by 2030 – with a handful of holdouts, such as Australia,” 
he said.

He said the Paris climate pact’s ambition of limiting global warming to 1.5C 
was “on life support” but there was still something that could save it.

“Keeping 1.5 alive requires a 45% reduction in global emissions by 2030 and 
carbon neutrality by mid-century,” the UN chief said. “That problem was not 
solved in Glasgow.”

The prime minister went to the Glasgow climate conference last year without the 
two big things countries were asked to commit to: stronger 2030 targets and a 
rapid phase-out of coal.

Morrison instead stuck to a six-year-old promise to cut emissions by 26% to 28% 
by 2030 but did say Australia would probably reach 35% by then. He refused to 
commit to an accelerated phase-out of coal.

His plan to achieve net zero emissions by 2050 relies on a technology-led 
economic evolution to cut emissions, capture and store them, or offset them, 
while allowing coal and gas exports to continue as long as there is demand.

Guterres implored all G20 governments to dismantle their domestic coal 
infrastructure, with full phase-out by 2030 for OECD countries and 2040 for all 
others.

He called coal a “stupid investment” that would lead to billions in stranded 
assets.

Simon Bradshaw, head of research at the Climate Council, said the UN chief’s 
direct and veiled attacks on Australia’s climate policies were striking.

“It’s very unusual for the UN secretary general to call out any country, 
specifically,” he said. “I don’t recall a time when this has happened. It’s 
striking to see.

“What it indicates is that we’re going to keep seeing that pressure on 
Australia until we step up. We’re still the only one of those big developed 
countries that hasn’t significantly increased its commitments for this decade.”

Fletcher told ABC News Breakfast the “chattering classes of the UN can say what 
they want” while Australia was “delivering outcomes” like a 20% emissions 
reduction since 2005. That was a “better performance” than the US, Canada, and 
New Zealand, Fletcher said.

The Nationals senator, Matt Canavan, said the UN should “read the room” and 
accused it of being “asleep” as “Europe has got itself into an absolute 
vulnerable mess because they failed to develop their own fossil fuels”.

“It is clear now that what we need to do is restore natural resource production 
to the free world,” he told Sky News.

“For the UN here – they are not only so hopeless on Ukraine … Now they’re 
actively undermining our peace and security, and we should totally ignore them.”

Imogen Zethoven sits on the reef 2050 advisory committee, where she represents 
the Queensland Conservation Council.

On Tuesday she will address a UN monitoring mission in Australia to evaluate 
federal government efforts to protect the Great Barrier Reef from climate 
change and other threats.

“The Morrison government should be shamed into action by this comment by the UN 
secretary general,” she said.

She said the influence the coal and gas industries have over Australia’s 
climate policies was disturbing.

“They are running our climate policy and it’s at the expense of the Great 
Barrier Reef, other vulnerable ecosystems, communities and future generations 
of Australians –including quiet Australians.”

The prime minister did not respond to requests for comment.

A spokesperson for the emissions reduction minister, Angus Taylor, said 
Australia had reduced emissions faster than 15 members of the G20.

“We have a real plan to deliver on our commitments, one that relies on 
technology not taxes,” he said. “We won’t sacrifice our traditional industries 
– and the jobs and communities they support – at the altar of emissions 
reduction.”

He said those industries and their workers would have an important role in the 
decades ahead.

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