
Labor leader Bill Shortenās promise on April 23 to helpĀ Ā if elected to the top job is as much about currying political favor with corporate mates as it is perpetuating the fiction that more gas will reduce energy prices.
Shorten is also guilty of perpetuating the dangerous myth āĀ Ā ā that gas is ācleanā energy.
Labor owes the gas companies big time. Market Forces estimates that, over 2017ā18, Woodside, Santos, Chevron Australia, Origin and Alinta Energy donated close to $500,000 to Labor.
They will want a return.
A section of Laborās union base also supports gas expansion.
The Australian Workersā Union, of which Shorten was secretary in the mid-2000s, has been the most vocal. It wants more conventional and unconventional gas mines opened up in Queensland and the Northern Territory, arguing it will create jobs and lower energy prices.
Labor is proposing to re-purpose the Northern Territory Infrastructure Fund (NAIF) into a slush fund and hand over $1.5 billion to gas companies on the basis that expanding the industry would ādrive down costsā and ācreate more jobsā.
Labor also wants to create a new āNorthern Australia Development Fundā to provide $1.5 billion for the industryāsĀ Ā across Queenslandās Galilee and Bowen basins, and another connecting the NTās Beetaloo Basin, south of Katherine, to Darwin and the east coast.
But Laborās talk of job opportunities and lower energy prices has been contradicted by reality. Importantly, it also ignores the climate scientists.
After the initial set-up phase, the number of jobs will dramatically dwindle as the gas industry becomes more automated.
Gas prices are subject to the rise and fall of prices on the international market ā the destination of most of Australiaās gas supply.
And climate scientists agree that the world has 10ā12 years to dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions to avert catastrophic climate change.
Price gouging and tax dodging
According to analysis byĀ Bruce Robertson forĀ theĀ ,Ā Laborās offer to subsidise the liquefied natural gas (LNG) industry is a āpoor decisionā.
The industry, he said, is already renowned for its price gouging and tax dodging.
āOnshore gas willĀ notĀ result in lower prices for consumers,ā Robertson said, pointing to the recent tripling of gas production on the east coast alongside a tripling of gas prices as evidence.
Australia is now the worldās largest LNG exporter, having overtaken the United States and Qatar. Robertson explained that the surge in gas production has not put downward pressure on domestic prices ā as politicians like to imply ā because neoliberal market rules, also known as āderegulationā, allow companies to control the price and supply of gas.
Despite the ongoing industry scare campaign about the east coast running out of gas, the reality is that it now produces three times more gas than it consumes.
Robertson also said that more subsidies to the unconventional gas industry, which is already well established in Queensland and trying to gain a foothold in the NT and NSW, is a bad investment.
āThere have also been massive fracking losses in Australiaā, he said, pointing to the BG Group, which wroteĀ down its fracking project by $5.4 billion before it sold it to Shell.
He said BHP and Santos have āhad multiple write-offsā, with BHP recently losingĀ US$10 billion in theĀ US, and Origin writing off an entire Queensland gas fieldĀ becauseĀ it was āunable toĀ find gasā.
The fracking industry had āmisjudged the costsā associated with building and operating gas projects as well as what gas fieldsĀ actually produce.
The unconventional gas industry has long trumpeted its high tax and royalty payments. But this too is a fiction.
The BG group claimed in 2010 that it would pay about $1 billion a year in federal taxes and a further $300 million in royalties to the Queensland government.
But an investigation by Michael West into the top 40 tax dodging companies has found that theĀ Ā on the $6.7 billion it listed as its total income over the past 3 years.
Renewable alternatives
Laborās pro-gas industry announcement comes as the global LNG market is already oversupplied and,Ā , the renewable energy sector (hydro, biomass, wind, solar and geothermal) is projected to generate more electricity than coal-fired plants in the US.
āDomestically, gas is no longer a competitive fuel for electricity production ā¦ and its usage is fallingā, Robertson said.
Further, he and many others have warned that the opening up of two major gas provinces āwill ensure Australia fails to meet its Paris commitmentsā.
Fugitive methane emissions from theĀ extraction, processing andĀ transportation of gas, as well as leaking well heads,Ā are a significant and growing contribution to Australiaās high per capita carbon footprint, as methane has more than 80 times the climate warming impact of carbon dioxide over the first 20 years after it is released.
°Õ³ó±šĢżĀ that to have a chance of keeping global temperature rise below 2Ā°C, more than 70% of Australiaās existing conventional gas reserves must stay in the ground.
In this federal election, Labor is only proposing an emissions reduction target of 45% on 2005 levels by 2030.
The Coalition says a reduction in emissions to 26ā28% on 2005 levels by 2030 is enough to meet Australiaās Paris Agreement.
By any measure, this is climate denialism and stands in stark contrast to the actions of others.
Scotlandās First MinisterĀ Ā declared a āclimate emergencyā recently and committed Scotland to become carbon neutral by 2050.
British Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said a Labour government would follow Scotlandās footsteps and ban fracking.
Australia, with its abundance of renewable and sustainable energy sources, could easily go down the same path. But that would require leadership and a commitment to putting people and the planet before profits.
In 2010,Ā Ā released a fully-costed plan of $370 billion over 10 yearsĀ to move to 100% renewable energy. Since then, prices have plummeted, as technology has improved and manufacturing grown.
Imagine if the $5 billion of NAIF funds was earmarked for a jobs transition to a zero carbon economy?
The remaining cost could easily be covered by withdrawing the $12 billion a year the government gives in subsidies to fossil fuel corporations and ending the tax dodging arrangements that allow theĀ Ā to pay only $26.8 billion in tax, when they should beĀ paying about $474 billion.