Alarmingly 鈥 but not surprisingly 鈥 2023 was the hottest year since 1850, but Labor is dragging its feet and depending on the private sector to handle the climate transition. Pip Hinman reports.
COP28
The COP28 climate summit in Dubai ended with an agreement that, for the first time, explicitly endorsed a move away from fossil fuels, but is so full of loopholes that the fossil fuel industry will be allowed to persist and thrive, reports Jake Johnson.
Expectations were never high for COP28, but as the climate deniers have managed to subvert the summit鈥檚 goals, Alex Bainbridge argues聽Australia must set its own climate transition plan.
As international solidarity with Palestinian people predicated on human rights continues to develop, it is intersecting with growing outrage over the environmental cost of war, writes Jordan AK.
COP28 is shaping up as another failure, argues Binoy Kampmark.
Labor and Coalition governments like to justify their policies聽as being based on聽supposed shared democratic values, which they then聽conflate聽with 鈥淎ustralian interests鈥. But the moral postering is coming underdone,聽as Peter Boyle argues.
Several hundred demonstrators rallied to聽call聽on the federal government to act on the climate as COP28 was underway. Jim McIlroy reports.
The Global Ecosocialist Network released the following statement on the eve of the COP28 climate meeting in Dubai.
Revelations on November 27 that COP28 host nation UAE planned to leverage its official position to pursue new oil and gas deals were a timely reminder that there are entire nations that essentially operate as oil companies, with precisely the same attention to morality as Exxon or Shell, writes Bill McKibben.