Marghanita writes,

> Vale Gough Whitlam

A pity such a bright light has currently been replaced by such a feeble, dim 
one ,,,


"Green Economy Index 2014: Australia ranked last for leadership"

By  Inga Ting, October 21, 2014  (snip) 
http://www.smh.com.au/business/carbon-economy/green-economy-index-2014-australia-ranked-last-for-leadership-20141020-118s1t.html


Australia has fallen sharply in international green economy rankings, coming 
last out of 60 countries for performance on political leadership and climate 
change .

Our performance now lags behind developing nations such as Kenya, Zambia, 
Ethiopia and Rwanda, according to the 2014 Global Green Economy Index. A green 
economy is one that improves the quality of life while reducing its 
environmental impact.

"Australia has seen a sharp decline since the change of government," said 
Jeremy Tamanini, chief executive of Dual Citizen, the Washington consultancy 
that produced the research.

"Its head of state [Tony Abbott] has a negative association with the green 
economy concept."

The 2014 index included more countries and indicators than in 2012 but 
Australia's fall in international standing was nonetheless "dramatic", he said.

The latest report attributes Australia's poor result for leadership to 
"negative [global] media coverage" and "unconstructive behaviour in 
international forums".

It said Australia is "a rare case" – along with a handful of countries 
including Japan, the Netherlands and the US – that gets more credit for its 
green economic performance than it deserves.

However, it also noted the debate about the carbon tax had "thrust the country 
into the international spotlight", which would perhaps bring Australia's 
international reputation more into alignment with its actual green economic 
performance.

Opposition climate change spokesperson Mark Butler said Australia's rank of 
"dead last" for leadership and climate change was "not in the least bit 
surprising, given Tony Abbott's ... refusal to attend the UN Climate Summit in 
September or include climate change on the G20 agenda".

Greens leader Christine Milne accused the Prime Minister of "well and truly 
demolish[ing] Australia's standing as a world leader in addressing global 
warming".

The index uses data from various sources, including the International Energy 
Agency, Cornell University, Yale University and the international INSEAD 
business school, to measure each country's performance and perception. 
Perception scores are based on an international survey of more than 1000 
practitioners in green economy sectors.

Sweden, Norway and Costa Rica topped this year's performance rankings; Germany, 
Denmark and Sweden scored highest for international reputation, or perception.

The government did not respond to questions about the index, or Australia's 
slide in the international rankings ..                                        
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