Australia news live: Liberal shadow minister calls net zero target a ‘distraction’ and denies row is destabilising Ley | Australia news

Key events

Show key events only

Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature

ABC journalist explains clash with US president Donald Trump

The ABC’s John Lyons explained more about his clash with US president Donald Trump.

Lyons spoke to RN Breakfast after he asked Trump how much wealthier he had become since returning to the White House for his second term. Trump then turned on Lyons, saying he was “hurting Australia very much” and alluded Anthony Albanese was coming to visit him soon.

“I’m going to tell him about you,” Trump said, adding “you set a very bad tone”.

John Lyons. Photograph: Photo courtesy ABC

Lyons explained more to RN:

He liked the first half of the question. He didn’t like the second half of the question.

[He] said I was hurting Australia. And he was going to tell on me to the prime minister, Anthony Albanese. So I’ve still got to brace myself for what happens when he tells on me.

… A lot of the questions now are almost sickeningly grovelling. And so, when you get a vaguely sort of objective question, then you stand out. I thought my questions were legitimate. It’s about holding truth to power.

Read more here:

Share

Updated at 23.20 CEST

Good morning, and happy Wednesday. Nick Visser here to take over the blog. Let’s jump in.

Share

Trump hints at Albanese meeting ‘very soon’

Donald Trump has indicated he is set to meet prime minister Anthony Albanese in the coming weeks.

“Your leader is coming over to see me very soon,” the US president told an Australian reporter while speaking to journalists as he left the White House for a visit to the United Kingdom.

Trump did not mention when he would meet Albanese.

The Australian prime minister is preparing to travel to New York in coming days for the United Nations general assembly, where a meeting on the sidelines with Trump was considered a possibility.

Read our full report:

Share

Nappy pants have been stripped from supermarket shelves after a serious pest was found inside a haul of imported products, Australian Associated Press reports.

Khapra beetle larvae were discovered inside Little One’s Ultra Dry Nappy Pants – Walker Size 5 (42pk) earlier in September, a federal agriculture department alert states.

The products were sold nationally by Woolworths and imported through a third company.

No other sizes or products from the same brand are believed to be impacted.

Anyone who bought the nappy pants has been told to seal the nappy pants in a bag to prevent the pest spreading and contact biosecurity authorities immediately.

Anyone who comes across the insects another way has been urged to raise the alarm.

A Woolworths spokesperson said as soon as they were made aware a customer raised the alarm the company removed the product from sale, quarantined it and launched an investigation with importer Ontex.

ShareAdam Morton

Boosting energy efficiency and electrification in homes, businesses, and at major industrial sites could deliver a fifth of the emissions cut needed to reach a 75% emissions reduction target by 2035, according to a new analysis.

The report by the Energy Efficiency Council, using modelling by the Climateworks Centre, has been released as cabinet decides on its 2035 emissions reduction target, expected to be announced late this week.

It found measures including doubling the number of heat pumps installed in homes each year, upgrading thousands of inefficient industrial motors and pumps with more advanced technology, and replacing diesel-power equipment on farms and mines could cut annual pollution by 44m tonnes a year.

The council’s chief executive, Luke Menzel, said making these sorts of improvements were “some of the most cost-effective and fastest actions we can take to cut emissions and reduce the impact of climate change”.

No matter what number the government picks for our 2035 target, if Australia is serious about reaching net zero by 2050 we must up the pace of appliance upgrades, building retrofits and industrial electrification now and not wait until the 2040s.

The best time to get stuck in to this was probably 10 or 15 years ago, The second best time is now.

Share

Net zero target a “distraction”, says new Liberal shadow minister

Luca Ittimani

Another member of the Liberals’ shadow ministry has defended the party’s internal debate over climate action and rejected net zero targets as a “distraction”.

Simon Kennedy, who Sussan Ley promoted to serve as a shadow assistant minister on Sunday, said Ley would welcome the party’s debate over whether to walk away from committing to reaching net zero emissions by 2050.

He told the ABC’s 7.30:

We’re having the debate the Labor Party should be having. … What [Ley] would welcome is Andrew [Hastie] and our party having a robust debate that Labor should be having on how do we actually reduce emissions and reduce energy [prices].”

A Liberal frontbencher, Andrew Hastie, this week said he would quit the shadow ministry if the party re-adopted the climate target, with colleague Jonno Duniam, suggesting more Liberals could follow suit.

Kennedy, the MP for Scott Morrison’s former seat of Cook, denied the debate was destabilising Ley’s leadership. He said he supported a net zero target but claimed it was “not a policy it’s a distraction” that Labor was using to divert attention from the fact emissions weren’t going down and energy prices were going up.

[Labor] are playing this politics about 2050 because they will do anything to avoid the disaster that’s hitting Australian industry.

The Liberals’ internal debate has come to a head in the same week the government released a landmark climate risk assessment, which Kennedy dismissed as “an alarmist report”.

Share

Welcome

Good morning and welcome to our live news blog. I’m Martin Farrer bringing you the top stories this morning and then my colleague Nick Visser will take the reins.

Donald Trump has indicated he is set to meet Anthony Albanese in the coming weeks. Responding to a question from an Australian ABC reporter at the White House as he left for the UK, Trump said Albanese was coming to see him “very soon”. More coming up.

As the opposition leader prepares to deliver a major speech on the economy, another member of Sussan Ley’s shadow ministry has defended the Coalition’s internal debate over climate action and rejected net zero targets as a “distraction”. More shortly.

Share

Source

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Recommended For You

Avatar photo

About the Author: News Hound