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Key Points
- Labor has unveiled its 2035 climate target after cabinet approval in Sydney.
- The government also announced new funding to help industry decarbonise, and to drive down electricity prices.
- Environmental groups had called for a target of no less than 80 per cent.
Alongside the 2035 target, the government also announced a $5 billion Net Zero Fund within the National Reconstruction Fund to help industries decarbonise, and $2 billion for the Clean Energy Finance Corporation to drive down electricity prices.
Bowen said the target range comes with a “robust” plan to get there.
Under the agreement, members must increase their emissions targets every five years and cannot water them down. Nations that signed up must submit their new targets by the end of this month.
‘Ambitious but feasible’
“We have looked at providing a target that will future-proof industry, future-proof economy and future proof our way of life and protect the planet,” he said.
‘Weak, dangerous and drastically short’, Greenpeace says
BCA chief executive Bran Black said: “We strongly support net zero by 2050, and getting this right is about balancing the needs of future generations, while ensuring Australian industry can continue to compete in the global market today.”
What have the Opposition and the Greens said?
“If the government wants to have an honest conversation with Australians, they need to be upfront about announcements they make in critical areas of energy. Energy is the economy. They need to be upfront about what it will actually cost.”