Morrisonā€™s tour of deception

September 29, 2021
Issue 
Brisbane climate protesters on September 15. Photo: Alex Bainbridge

Away from the discord within his own ranks, Prime Minister Scott Morrison could breathe a sigh of relief in Washington for the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue meeting on September 25, where no one would notice his prehistoric approach climate change.

Besides, a security compact with the United States and the United Kingdom (AUKUS) had just been signed, allowing Morrisonā€™s government to have eight submarines with nuclear propulsion.

Morrison was careful to toe the line of the partner made supplicant for the US media. by CBSā€™s Face the Nation whether the US and its allies were moving towards conflict with Beijing. ā€œI donā€™t think itā€™s inevitable at allā€, he chirped, adding that co-existence is ā€œin everybodyā€™s interestā€.

Morrisonā€™s ā€œco-existenceā€ is premised on keeping China in the box or, as he put it, for ā€œfree nations like Australiaā€ in the Indo-Pacific to stay vigilant.

Morrison was also pressed on climate change, having not ā€œgiven a timelineā€ to get to net zero emissions. After admitting this, he slipped back into advertising mode, saying that, for Australia, ā€œperformance mattersā€. The net zero target was being pursued and would be achieved ā€œpreferably by 2050ā€.

The usual half-baked assurances followed: Australiaā€™s record was ā€œstrongā€; Australia has ā€œalready reduced emissions by over 20% since 2005ā€; ā€œWe committed to Kyotoā€; and ā€œWe met that target and beat that targetā€.

As for the Paris target? Not an issue: Australia would romp it.

When CBSā€™s Margaret Brennan observed that no country had delivered on such targets, Morrison replied that it was not a problem. ā€œItā€™s one thing to have a commitment but, in Australia, youā€™re not taken seriously unless youā€™ve got a plan to achieve the commitment.ā€

In a Ā on September 24, Morrison pursued his favourite theme in the global climate debate ā€” technology. In his cosmos, Australia is never the laggard. Developing countries, he insisted, should be the ā€œpriorityā€, another way of saying they were the problem.

ā€œIf we want to address climate change, then we need to address the change that is necessary in developing economies so they can grow their economies, build their industries, make the things the world needsā€, Morrison said.

thanked Morrison for showing ā€œleadershipā€ on climate change,Ā adding that she thoughtĀ the new AUKUS security pact was ā€œpretty excitingā€.

The next day, she Morrisonā€™s remarks about the Paris targets with candy-grabbing enthusiasm:Ā Britainā€™s Boris Johnson and Morrison were ā€œso exuberant about the urgency of addressing the climate issuesā€, she said.Ā 

It was Morrisonā€™s slogan, ā€œWe Meet It and We Beat Itā€, that impressed. That was enough forĀ Pelosi: ā€œTheyā€™re leading the way and thatā€™s what we all have to doā€, she gushed, confident that Australia would commit toĀ the Paris Accord.

Pelosi and company have proved to be something of a sounding board for the next federal election here. Morrisonā€™s climate change action will be minimal, but that will be irrelevant in a number of electoral battlegrounds.

Just having a slogan, Sean Kelly in the Sydney Morning Herald on September 25, will be acceptable to ā€œa remarkable number of people as an acceptable substitute for reality ā€”Ā just as it was in America last weekā€. Kelly was an advisor to two previous Labor prime ministers.

TheĀ Labor Party, still languishing in hopeless opposition, has every reason to be worried.

[Binoy Kampmark lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne. He can be emailed atĀ bkampmark@gmail.com.]

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