IN A world increasingly turning away
from fossil fuels, Australia is now less prepared to prosper than it
was 25 years ago, a new report says.
The left-leaning Climate Institute says Australia is the only G20
country to score lower on its low-carbon competitiveness index for 2012
compared with 1995.
"Australia is the worst performing advanced
economy among the G20," the institute says in its the global climate
leadership review, released today.
"It is the only country which has become less prepared for the low-carbon economy since 1995."
France,
Japan, the United Kingdom, South Korea and Germany top the index, which
measures a country's ability to prosper in the emerging global
low-carbon economy.
Australia is ranked 16th of the 19 G20 nations behind Argentina, South Africa, Saudi Arabia and the United States.
The low-carbon competitiveness index is based on three factors: how a
country's economy is currently structured towards less
emissions-intensive activities, steps they've already taken to move
towards a low-carbon future and investments in education and
infrastructure.
Australia, a coal exporter, obviously struggles with the first.
"Australia
has the lowest level of overall clean energy production, the second
highest number of cars per capita and relatively high deforestation and
emissions per capita from the transport sector," the review says.
By
contrast France currently has the highest level of clean energy
production, the least emissions-intensive exports and relatively low
levels of car ownership.
But it's not all bad news.
The 2012
review, produced in partnership with GE, didn't examine Australia's
plans for a carbon tax and emissions trading scheme because they haven't
started yet.
"The clean energy future package will begin to change our direction," the Climate Institute review states.
"For the first time Australia will have an absolute and ongoing limit placed on the carbon pollution we release into the air."
The
review states that Labor's pollution price, the carbon farming
initiative, the renewable energy target and a raft of other clean-energy
initiatives "can drive investment, innovation and minimise the threats
and maximise the benefits to our citizens in a world limiting
pollution".
In 2011 there was record spending on clean energy with global investment topping US$260 billion.
Investment in clean energy generation rose to 42 per cent of total energy investment in 2010.
The
Gillard government's carbon tax starts on July 1 with a fixed
$23-a-tonne pollution price. It will transition to an emissions trading
scheme in mid-2015 with a floating price set by the market.
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