Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeOpinionIndustry moving forward

Industry moving forward

This week the Albanese Labor Government took a major step forward in delivering certainty to Australian industry about how we can reduce emissions and promote job creation. Some people say these reforms go too far, some day they don’t go far enough. That’s probably a good sign that we have got the balance right.

But I know that all of this misinformation can make Queenslanders who live in coal mining communities anxious and searching for the facts. So, let’s set the record straight on what our reforms are about.

The Safeguard Mechanism was first introduced by the Coalition to put a ceiling on emissions from our largest emitters, but actually emissions have been going up. Our reasonable and sensible reforms have been designed to provide certainty for our biggest emitters on their way to net zero by 2050, which over 80% of them are committed to.

That’s why peak groups like Australian Industry Group, the Business Council of Australia and Manufacturing Australia have welcomed it.

These reforms will reduce 205 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 – equivalent to taking two-thirds of the nation’s cars off the road in the same period.

This reform complements the over $24 billion of investment the Government is already making in super charging our renewable energy and critical mineral sector. Labor’s Powering Australia Plan will create 604,000 jobs with 5 in 6 of those jobs in regional Australia.

The Safeguard reforms are also about keeping Australian industry competitive in a decarbonising global economy.

But of course, in response to these reforms, we saw the usual scaremongering from the Liberal National Party. They really will say anything to stop these sensible reforms. So let me be really clear.

The Safeguard mechanism won’t introduce a new carbon tax. It is not a tax.

The Safeguards mechanism doesn’t mean that manufacturing companies in Australia will be less competitive. On the contrary, they will finally have the opportunity to get ahead of the game when it comes to new energy innovation.

And we are providing $1 billion in direct support for trade-exposed industries and hard-to-abate sectors like steel, aluminium and cement to ensure they can invest in new technologies that will safeguard their future in a changing global economy.

This is just another scare campaign designed to stir up fear and distract from an Opposition that doesn’t have a policy on how they would reduce emissions.

Matt Canavan, Colin Boyce and Michelle Landry all voted against the $15 Billion National Reconstruction Fund this week, a fund created to bring manufacturing jobs back home to regional Australia. You can’t say you support regional jobs then vote against them.

The truth is the scaremongering and spreading lies about climate change won’t save a single job or create any new ones.

The Albanese Labor Government will be getting on with the job of making a real and positive impact on communities in regional Queensland. And our Safeguard Mechanism reforms that passed this week will do just that.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Opposition ‘all for’ Olympics in Rocky

Shadow Olympic and Paralympic Games Minister Grace Grace says the State Opposition wants Olympic rowing to be held in Rockhampton in 2032, taking aim...
More News

Star CQ filly’s thrilling Caulfield success

Stand-in jockey Zac Spain’s nerveless ride guided star Central Queensland filly Sheza Alibi to a thrilling victory in the $300,000 Group 2 Angus Armanasco...

Our working class heroes deserve better

There are many unsung heroes in the electorate of Flynn that often leave for work in the dark and return home in the dark. These...

Bridge to belonging: Rainbow makeover celebrates inclusion

A weathered pedestrian bridge near Capricornia College at CQUniversity’s Rockhampton campus is being transformed into a vibrant symbol of inclusion, with a rainbow makeover...

New arrivals bring investment capital

With the Capricorn Coast and broader regional Australia firmly on the radar for 2026 investors, Rockhampton-based financial planner Dimitri Kondilis is encouraging Australians relocating...

Collaborative vision charts new path for Mount Etna’s future

A full-day stakeholder workshop at Mount Etna Caves National Park has marked the first step in a long-term, collaborative approach to restoring one of...

Morning tea raises funds for RFDS

The RFDS Rockhampton Volunteer Auxiliary's first morning tea for the year will be held on Wednesday, 4 March at the Rockhampton Jockey Club. Spokesperson Rose...

Big change as decimal currency rolls in

Some of our readers may recognise the jingle that was used to introduce decimal currency to Australia 60 years ago, on 14 February 1966...

Jefferies here to ‘yell at you’

Australia’s global comedy heavyweight, Jim Jefferies will bring his internationally acclaimed Son of a Carpenter tour home in 2026 for a huge run of...

Separation and divorce

After you have been separated for at least one year, you can apply for a divorce. Divorce is the legal recognition the marriage...

Capturing the nautical

The first competition meeting of the Rockhampton Camera Club had photographers out and about capturing images with a nautical theme, from cargo ships to...