How this country became a climate villain

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  • Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @DWPlanetA
    @DWPlanetA  Год назад +131

    Which country should we take a look at next?

    • @Kevin-fq3zh
      @Kevin-fq3zh Год назад +1

      India & pakistan of course… many skeletons in their closets

    • @Petch85
      @Petch85 Год назад +105

      New Zealand

    • @pavan4754
      @pavan4754 Год назад +7

      @@Petch85 😂😂😂

    • @ianlang9312
      @ianlang9312 Год назад +92

      Canada

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Год назад +89

      Germany. Despite over €600 billion spent on the Energiewende (renewable wind) over the past years and phasing out nuclear power, their average carbon emissions of electricity are still high (~500 grams of CO2 per kWh). In fact, this amount is roughly equal to the carbon emissions of electricity of 2 of Australia's most populated states...

  • @AGCipher
    @AGCipher Год назад +1265

    Can we just call lobbying what it really is? Corruption...

    • @ahkoy973
      @ahkoy973 Год назад

      Legalised corruption and it's wrong

    • @MP-ut6eb
      @MP-ut6eb Год назад +15

      Tx. Words has much more impact then we think

    • @jonatan_leandoer96
      @jonatan_leandoer96 Год назад

      ​@@MP-ut6eb Hey I'm thaiboy digital from drain gang

    • @_thunderbolt_2920
      @_thunderbolt_2920 Год назад

      Even worse, its legal corruption

    • @MP-ut6eb
      @MP-ut6eb Год назад +6

      @@jonatan_leandoer96 pardon?

  • @toma6180
    @toma6180 Год назад +419

    Being an Australian, I must say this is an Extremely frustrating topic, many Australians do really want change! We have been protesting for change, but our government is much more focused on the profits from large coal TNCs than national interests, it's painful! So painful to watch my country do such little effort to change, aswell as accept evermore coal powerplants to be built. It's internationally embarrassing

    • @ingofreehe2168
      @ingofreehe2168 Год назад +12

      Even if Australia would stop using or exporting fossil fuels etc. the rest of the world is still polluting enough for the floods and fires to continue. The only difference now is, that Australia will loose billions of dollars to fight them. It is simply too small to make a difference. I agree the domestic electricity should be based more on renewables. But don't stop selling your resources to other countries !

    • @pradeepkharta5953
      @pradeepkharta5953 Год назад +2

      Well I don't understand why Australians don't industrialized there country.

    • @maazkalim
      @maazkalim Год назад +3

      “Australia”: The sovereign State conflated to be a continent in and of itself by number of folks at times..
      ...Is “too small” than overwhelming-majority of _per capita_ climate antagonists, Mr "​@@ingofreehe2168"?.!??
      Who are you, exactly?
      The anti-Mercator?

    • @thejollygrimreaper
      @thejollygrimreaper Год назад

      @@pradeepkharta5953 a lot of us would like to see that but there are so many barriers in the way for us, we still have our government telling us to take our products to china while publicly screaming for manufacturing to come back, they won't lift a finger to help local businesses but foreign companies they bend over for , basic things like industrial units or warehouses are so overpriced they sit empty for years and even if you can afford one the things to have to do compliance wise depending on the industry you are in is a show stopping joke.

    • @ronanonline3515
      @ronanonline3515 Год назад +24

      ​@@ingofreehe2168 such a weak excuse. 16th largest economy in the world is not exactly small! NZ says the same thing - equally inexcusable Nd they really are small. Why you just reduce your per capita emissions to the world average then?

  • @stanleykubrick8786
    @stanleykubrick8786 Год назад +381

    DW Planet A: Could you please do a feature on Canada as the second-largest polluter in the world? I'm from Canada and would appreciate more visibility about our wasteful hypocrisy; the challenge is that it's not likely to come from any Canadian sources, we need courageous outsiders to do that.

    • @AuJohnM
      @AuJohnM Год назад

      CO2 ain't pollution. It's as esential as water for life on this planet. Without it you'd have almost nothing to eat, not that that would be a big problem because you wouldn't be able to breathe (because Co2 regulates breathing).

    • @BatCaveOz
      @BatCaveOz Год назад +8

      "Courageous outsiders" LOL
      Legit question - Did your Mommy have to safety pin your mittens to your sleeves so you wouldn't lose them?

    • @asoka7752
      @asoka7752 Год назад

      oh they won't as long as Canada follows the agenda of their liberal masters.

    • @carolines.6517
      @carolines.6517 Год назад

      Canadian here and I agree! Please cover canada and our hypocritical liberal leader JT cause the rest of the world thinks we’re so good and he’s like a god

    • @rutvikrs
      @rutvikrs Год назад +8

      Saving you a 15 minutes, Mining and oil, heating on cities and industrial complex.

  • @thomasbitsch5488
    @thomasbitsch5488 Год назад +89

    Since Denmark was nr. 1 on the climate list you showed us that would be very interesting to hear why they're the most ambitious.

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Год назад +17

      Hi Thomas, thanks for your question. We visited an island in Denmark to take a look at some of these practices. You can watch this video here ruclips.net/video/ZH0-QKscik8/видео.html. Please let us know what you think in the comments. 🌸

    • @thebloody0076
      @thebloody0076 Год назад +9

      Denmark has also some of the highest energy costs in the world and is crazy expensive to live. For the sake of the climate religion? NO, thank you

    • @thomasbitsch5488
      @thomasbitsch5488 Год назад +14

      @@thebloody0076 That’s true, but since my country is expensive to live that also means we have no poor people, no one is hungry, and our school system is one of the greatest in the world - just behind if not on the same level as Sweden and Finland.

    • @thomasbitsch5488
      @thomasbitsch5488 Год назад +5

      @@thebloody0076 the salaries also compensates for the expensive living.

    • @muysli.y1855
      @muysli.y1855 Год назад +2

      ​​@@thebloody0076 From someone who live boarder to Denmark living there was always expansiv same in Switerzland, the reason why both come to Germany for Shopping 😄

  • @thecrazygainerguy
    @thecrazygainerguy Год назад +58

    Also need to point some of our other major news sources are also pretty conservative and also down play the role of ckimate change. People in Australia dont understand how low our media freedom actually is. There are very limited protections for whistleblowers and federal publicnservants arent allowed to express political opinions on their own social media. In 2019 our democracy was considered narrowed and there has been some much stronger anti protester legislation going through at state level too. There are some very concerning things going on in Australia if you really look at it.

    • @blaxxalotl2943
      @blaxxalotl2943 Год назад

      i think most people understand that our media is limited i just believe no one cares enough to change it.

    • @maazkalim
      @maazkalim Год назад

      Well..
      As they say..
      So as long as you toil for the Superpower by imitating them as much as you can, you would remain in jolly company with the jolly good elites' club.

    • @diggs6247
      @diggs6247 Год назад +3

      Australia already has statutes on the books which will allow a complete dictatorial take-over of government to happen overnight. All that is needed for enactment is the right set of circumstances, which could very probably be economic breakdown and resulting civil unrest. Approximately 75% of the population is in favour of taking the steps necessary to tackle global warming, but Australia is seriously lagging in its response. Fossil fuel industries simply buy politicians, and as the climate situation worsens, the owners will tell the politicians when to jump and how high.The typical Australian has no idea of how tenuous the illusion of democracy is. Apathy and ignorance have been fostered for many years by a political and media stranglehold on the minds of many.

    • @margaretarmstrong2445
      @margaretarmstrong2445 Год назад

      ​@@diggs6247 You are so wrong! Where do you get your 75% from? What do you know about the cradle to grave story of the 'green' industry? Wind and solar have been rolling out in Australia for more than a decade now. I have the misfortune of living in a Renewable Energy Zone and what is happening out here in the regions is devastating. You are oblivious to what is going on because you aren't confronted by it. Wake up and do some research.

  • @SaveMoneySavethePlanet
    @SaveMoneySavethePlanet Год назад +238

    8:06 I hear the “it’ll cost jobs” argument in America all the time too. In reality, we can easily setup programs to retrain people from one rigorous job like coal mining into a new rigorous job like installing solar. That’s not the problem.
    The problem is that it’ll lower the revenue of the mining company while raising the revenue of the solar company and the dear old lobbyists just can’t have that now can they?!

    • @rchltrrs
      @rchltrrs Год назад +1

      Yes! This frustrates me so much! There are ways to offset the jobs that would be lost. Also, this is a normal thing. Industries rise and fall. No one was asking the government to block Netflix because it was going to cost Blockbuster employees their jobs. Manufacturers are allowed to automate even if that costs jobs in their plants. We only magically care when it's jobs connected to deep pockets.

    • @SaveMoneySavethePlanet
      @SaveMoneySavethePlanet Год назад +4

      @@rchltrrs I love the Netflix/Blockbuster analogy. You’re bang on!
      I may have to steal that for a future video haha! I spoke to this stuff briefly in my UBI video but I feel like a video dedicated to finding the energy transition could be a good idea.

    • @adtastic1533
      @adtastic1533 Год назад +12

      That's a load of nonsense. Renewables don't require the same amount of labour and they don't pay as well. Especially if you are retraining from an experienced position to an entry level one.

    • @rchltrrs
      @rchltrrs Год назад

      @adtastic1533 yeah, a whole coal mining town can't all start installing solar panels and make a living but does it make sense to prop up a harmful industry forever? This happens, industries die. When armies stopped using metal plate and chainmail armor blacksmiths lost their jobs. Most cassette tape manufacturers probably don't exist anymore. At some point new inventions come along and the cost/benefit analysis of sticking to the old ways doesn't make sense anymore. I think the government needs to step in to help the most heavily affected communities through the transition but I still firmly believe that it needs to happen

    • @Admiral-General_Aladeen
      @Admiral-General_Aladeen Год назад +12

      They literally have almost unlimited space for solar and wind they could employ half the country just building and maintaining these additionally they have some of the biggest urainium deposits for nuclear if the wind isn't blowing or at night
      Australia is almost an ideal country for renewable energy

  • @bruceb7464
    @bruceb7464 Год назад +65

    One of the main issues, as pointed out in the video, is the anonymous funds coming being donated to the main political parties - Labor, Liberals/Nationals. It is outrageous that the Australian public is not told who is providing these donations. Even though we are not told it is highly likely that a significant proportion of this is from the fossil fuel industry. No industry would give away money unless they were certain of a very good return - which it seems they are getting.

    • @adrianthoroughgood1191
      @adrianthoroughgood1191 Год назад

      Australia has got rid of first past the post which is a vital step towards real democracy. The other vital thing is preventing rich people from buying politicians, which they are doing badly on. Company donations should be banned and personal donations should be capped to a modest amount per year per person so ordinary people have an equal say to rich people in politics.

    • @JusticeAlways
      @JusticeAlways Год назад +1

      In the US it's called "Citizens United".
      That has ruined our political situation.

    • @marshalepage5330
      @marshalepage5330 Год назад +1

      Calling the people doing this the fossil fuel industry instead of by their real names guarantees no accountability. They are people not an industry.

    • @grahamstevenson1740
      @grahamstevenson1740 Год назад +1

      Giving funds to political parties ought to be totally out in the open, so you know who's bought your politicians.

    • @tiddlypom2097
      @tiddlypom2097 4 месяца назад +1

      @@grahamstevenson1740Agreed! In Australia we do have some transparency, there are published lists of official donations above a certain amount. Those lists show who has bought and own the political parties. However, this is just a first step: it hasn't been enough to change anything. Probably because major private media (like Murdoch's) have no interest in making this an issue

  • @MrLordSandwich
    @MrLordSandwich Год назад +156

    As an Aussie from Tasmania, thank you. This is the best video I've seen on this issue to date. When you mentioned Murderous Murdoch my blood boiled! He has done more harm then good for our country and the world.

    • @Matto_Harvo
      @Matto_Harvo Год назад +10

      Any Aussie that wants to get rid of fossil fuel usage should stop using anything that comes from fossil fuels. Oh, and I reckon that you’ve never tried to look at what comes from fossil fuels; much of the stuff we use comes from “fossil fuels” but has nothing to do with energy. Try it. But first determined e where hydrocarbons are used. Then get rid of the:. I KNOW that you won’t; can’t.

    • @bruceb7464
      @bruceb7464 Год назад +27

      @@Matto_Harvo This is such a poor argument. You can't put the blame and responsibility for, and the requirement to fix the problem, onto the individual. Systemic change is required. This can only be achieved by Government taking the lead, making regulations and laws and mandating and implementing changes to infrastructure away from fossil fuel use.

    • @Matto_Harvo
      @Matto_Harvo Год назад +1

      @@bruceb7464 You’re right, if every individual in the world did the correct thing, the globe would still be stuffed. Own it! Fix your backyard in the way you want it; then stick your nose over the fence. Otherwise you’re a whinging hypocrit that lives in the luxury of hydrocarbon modernity while Pooh poohing it at the same time. Hypocrisy! Horrible!

    • @albundy9222
      @albundy9222 Год назад +9

      @@Matto_Harvo Murdoch fed you quite well.

    • @AussieZeKieL
      @AussieZeKieL Год назад +10

      @@Matto_Harvo I live in Australia. We have more roof top solar per capita than any other country. I fill my car up once a month and all my electrical energy comes from hydro-electic. Also my property is full of trees... probably doing much better than you...

  • @crylicakress8380
    @crylicakress8380 Год назад +140

    Thank you so much for covering this DW! As a young Australian it's been extremely frustrating to witness the corruption and revolving door between the fossil fuel industry and government. Even when you vote for the party with the most effective climate policies, it's not enough to change the tide. Most Australians want change but are plagued by misinformation from the Murdoch press. The general public lack the information about the effective climate policies, such as Australian Institute's research. It's difficult to convince my parents and peers how much this matters for our shared future.

    • @aaronfield7899
      @aaronfield7899 Год назад

      Us Americans are suffering from corruption in our government by the fossil fuel industry at least 10 times more than you.

    • @gerryhouska2859
      @gerryhouska2859 Год назад +8

      As an old Australian, I agree 100%. Unfortunately the party with the most effective policies (the Greens) gets barely 15% of the vote and in our duopoly system the competition is between centre right neocon Labor and far right neocon LNP+ coalition.

    • @-opus
      @-opus Год назад

      I wish you were correct about most Australians wanting change, in my opinion most Australians are either climate deniers, or just completely apathetic consumerists.

    • @Matto_Harvo
      @Matto_Harvo Год назад +3

      “Most” Australians that want change do not understand the immediate ramifications. Immediate ramifications that can be easily understood are ignored for long term ramifications that are poorly understood. A huge land like Australia with electric transport: seriously think through that issue. I love the way the video says how Australia has minerals etc that are vital to a clean future: How do these resources become clean energy sources?

    • @aaronfield7899
      @aaronfield7899 Год назад +3

      @@Matto_Harvo look, nobody is saying that mining for lithium batteries is environmentally friendly, but ANYTHING is better than coal!

  • @blessingndlovu9037
    @blessingndlovu9037 Год назад +196

    Very interesting. Here in South Africa Australia is usually used as an ideal example of how we should transition from fossil fuels. Videos like this expose the half truths we are fed by those people who have Australia on a high pedestal.

    • @guringai
      @guringai Год назад +18

      At least the current federal Labor government is making a half arsed attempt to transition, which is a huge improvement from the last conservative gov't.
      Economic benefits of renewable energy are likely to shift things more rapidly than govt policy now.

    • @rexxx777
      @rexxx777 Год назад +1

      This is the mass media. Don't be so trusting about what you see. The last three years should have taught you that.

    • @paulfri1569
      @paulfri1569 Год назад +8

      The video is a hit job on Australia.. Remember Russia has been funding these green movements for a reason and that is so you have to depend on them once the competition is taken out..

    • @guringai
      @guringai Год назад

      @@paulfri1569 . What utter garbage you say. Green movements have zero alignment with Putin's regime.
      However I'd be interested in what you think is an example...

    • @Commander_ZiN
      @Commander_ZiN Год назад

      ​@@paulfri1569 what the heck are you on about?
      As an Australian I can tell you this is pretty accurate. However I don't know if I'd call the land stolen, but that's a bit of perspective and in some cases I'd agree.
      Labor is centre right not centre left.
      Our media has been controlled by Rupert Murdoch far more than they mentioned in this vid. 75% - 95% of all news media is controlled or influenced by Murdoch.
      It's been like this for over 30 years. We've been trying to fight climate change for a long time but our governments have been ignoring us.
      When PM Kevin Rudd implemented a carbon tax, Murdoch dragged him through the dirt in the papers and got him ousted and replaced by Gillard.
      Same with the Liberal PM that was ousted in the video, both times only possible due to Murdoch.
      Both ex-PM's and Australians have been trying to fight Murdoch, but the current government denied a royal commission into the diversity in news media.
      This is all stuff you can look up and easily confirm.
      Your Russia conspiracy theory has no basis, why does going green have anything to do with Russia?
      Going green would mean less reliance on fossil fuels in the first place, less reliance on Russia. Your statement not only has no facts to back it up, but is contradictory on the face of it.
      Rupert Mudoch is the most influencing factor, I wouldn't be surprised if he has ties to Russian Oligarchs, but he's pro coal as he has a lot of money invested in fossil fuels.
      It shouldn't be Australia that gets the blame for this, it should be Rupert Murdoch and the Liberal party!

  • @lawrenceheyman435
    @lawrenceheyman435 Год назад +55

    Mostly accurate. The new government's plans are a start, helping to prove that renewables won't kill the economy. They need two terms in government to make the changes irreversible. Also, South Australia (another state) is now 70% renewables in their electricity grid and climbing and without hydro

    • @toozy101
      @toozy101 Год назад +1

      It'll send us broke, while China increases their emissions.

    • @lawrenceheyman435
      @lawrenceheyman435 Год назад

      @TOOZY send us broke? If you feel that way, why don't you build a coal-fired power station? Why did the last federal government of fiscal conservatives spend taxpayer money to build a new gas-fired plant? - most likely they couldn't get it built by a private group, because people don't want to lose money on it

    • @alyssaoconnor
      @alyssaoconnor Год назад +2

      Tasmania does its share too, it was the third carbon negative place in the world. SA, Tas and NT are all doing their best to preserve our environment and follow regulations but the other states could definitely do a lot better, WA especially.

    • @lawrenceheyman435
      @lawrenceheyman435 Год назад +2

      @@alyssaoconnor I think Qld is most behind, but both WA and Qld have made encouraging sounds of change. Strange as they have more potential than anyone.

  • @Kelvin555s
    @Kelvin555s Год назад +11

    So true. Not long ago we even had a prime minister and a party in power didn't care about climate change despite having a record bush fire. It's all about money and mine lobby groups that major parties care. Nothing going to change as long as the core voters does not change. I am hopeful as young generation gets into voting age and open for alternatives.

  • @ditodidiadikta
    @ditodidiadikta Год назад +28

    Australian from Canberra here laughing and crying at the same time to this paradoxical reality of ours

    • @phuocluong7974
      @phuocluong7974 Год назад +2

      I’m Australia as well but the general Australian public is not fault-free in our dependence on fossil fuels. People have been protesting against nuclear power since the 1950s which would’ve massively reduced our emissions much like America and Europe. And also as much as we don’t like to admit it, much of our social subsidies are a beneficiary of the mining industry. It’s basically the whole reason why our public debt hasn’t exploded. And our economy is much more reliant on the mining industry than people think. And we don’t have much competitive advantage in other sectors considering that we are tiny in population in the Asia Pacific zone.

  • @michaelfabish-wood4444
    @michaelfabish-wood4444 Год назад +12

    As an Aussie. Completely agree. We have the means and the resources to make the swap, very quickly. But the same level of corruption exists due to the wealth of our major exporters. The sun shines everywhere here, the solar is cheaper than coal now and we have all the space in the world. It’s also true that majority of Australia want the change. Meaning democracy has failed us yet again.

    • @MaxMitch22
      @MaxMitch22 4 месяца назад

      Time to act independently, vote for Independents that are committed to real action on climate change and will tax the elites and corporations that avoid their tax commitments.

  • @broadcase21
    @broadcase21 Год назад +8

    Totally correct. The media and powerful lobbyist into the politics are the plague here in Australia.

  • @formosanbusinesssupportco.5343
    @formosanbusinesssupportco.5343 Год назад +18

    Please do a video on Taiwan where the government since 2016 tries hard to transition to 20% renewable by 2025, but only keeps declining and fossils rising.

    • @jebbo-c1l
      @jebbo-c1l Год назад

      they should urgently transition just from an energy security point of view. What if China one day decides to blockade the island and they cant import oil and gas?

    • @Amaling
      @Amaling Год назад

      yeah it's strange. Meanwhile hong kong has done quite well for itself in this regard

    • @woo-see
      @woo-see Год назад

      @@Amaling Hong Kong has only one wind turbine, not one wind farm, and household solar panels. There is very little renewable energy production

  • @thehoundGOT
    @thehoundGOT Год назад +57

    Please do New Zealand next, we topped one the charts in this video of emissions per capita

    • @TheMntnG
      @TheMntnG Год назад +2

      because of cars

    • @thehoundGOT
      @thehoundGOT Год назад +11

      @@TheMntnG I think you mean cows

    • @TheMntnG
      @TheMntnG Год назад

      @@thehoundGOT
      both

    • @user-xu3cz7vp2j
      @user-xu3cz7vp2j Год назад +2

      @@TheMntnG I agree, we are tied with the USA among the most car-dependent country. Almost everyone here drives their giant SUV to work and back!

    • @paulsz6194
      @paulsz6194 Год назад

      Does that include all the cows & sheep, which you use to export as meat, buttter & wool? Don’t forget their contributions? 🐑 🐮

  • @micled93
    @micled93 Год назад +19

    I'm thankful that others are recognising our struggle with the government here. They don't listen. Everyone in my town that faced the floods in Queensland openly talk about this issue.

    • @astra6712
      @astra6712 Год назад +2

      It’s called the weather. La Niña has returned to the East Pacific.

  • @After_Pasta
    @After_Pasta Год назад +9

    The public actually wants more climate action
    but the government basically ignores them

  • @thejiseokkim
    @thejiseokkim Год назад +18

    You should look into South Korea as well. It is still building coal power plants even though it continues get battered by climate disasters. It’s Posco steelmill, responsible for 5 percent of national emissions was flooded last year and couldn’t be operated at full capacity for months.

    • @edwardfletcher7790
      @edwardfletcher7790 Год назад

      South Korea has a MASSIVE problem with religious Cults controlling political parties !

    • @VARMOT123
      @VARMOT123 Год назад

      And you import that coal as well right ?.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Год назад

      Energy is what insulates Koreans from a naturally hostile climate.

  • @sebastiangruenfeld141
    @sebastiangruenfeld141 Год назад +101

    >be Australia
    >own 25% of worlds Uranium
    >half the continent is barren desert perfect for wind parks and solar farms
    >have practically "limitless" clean energy at your disposal
    >don't develop any of it
    Why are Aussies like that?

    • @adityasinghjadoun6675
      @adityasinghjadoun6675 Год назад

      why are u using writing format of a mongolian basket weaving forum on youtube

    • @Admiral-General_Aladeen
      @Admiral-General_Aladeen Год назад +30

      Don't forget
      >has already some of the hottest weather
      >regularly effected by wildfires
      >will be one of the worst effected by climate change

    • @spacefacts1681
      @spacefacts1681 Год назад

      well for one our Greens party successfully got nuclear power banned in 1999 and they've lied about the pros and cons of it whenever they get the chance

    • @shitzuation
      @shitzuation Год назад +19

      Same reason as always..
      💰💰💰🤑🤑🤑💰💰💰

    • @Ritzer168
      @Ritzer168 Год назад +21

      Simple answer is lobbying from coal and gas corporations that run the Powerstation and mines/fracking. The slightest hint of reform and the Federal government is sicked on.
      There is changes happening at a state level but federally is where the challenges lie. Not to mention we had the Coalition in for 9 years.

  • @awf6554
    @awf6554 Год назад +31

    Good report. The most significant factors are a (previous) federal coalition government owned by the minerals industry and the Murdoch media. Although 70% or so of Australians want action on climate change, federal elections are won on small margins of a couple of percentages. Murdoch and the coalition have done just enough to muddy the political scene with non-climate issues to retain power. Until the last election that is.
    In the meantime, all Australian state governments have been taking action on climate change.

    • @AuJohnM
      @AuJohnM Год назад +2

      Do you have even a shred of evidence to support your claims? If not, then why did you make them?

    • @awf6554
      @awf6554 Год назад +4

      ​@@AuJohnM Of course. The info is there for anyone who can use a search engine.

    • @asthmatictuna
      @asthmatictuna Год назад +3

      @@AuJohnM uh did you watch the video? it said exactly this.

    • @olivernorth-coombes4720
      @olivernorth-coombes4720 Год назад

      It is crucial for a democracy to have media with different thinking and news. News corp provides conservative views.

    • @olivernorth-coombes4720
      @olivernorth-coombes4720 Год назад

      This article is full of misinformation and disinformation.

  • @-cheshire-cat
    @-cheshire-cat Год назад +37

    You wonder what kind of society we're creating when big businesses can sway the government and create billion dollar marketing campaigns to sway average people too, then disregard the environment all in the name of profit. Let's hope one day this will be fixed or massive pollution/shortages/droughts/fires/floods will be the new normal for a lot of countries.

    • @jaydenwilson9522
      @jaydenwilson9522 Год назад +3

      its not big business, its physics, name me one energy souce besides NEW nucluer reactors that are less damaging than fossil fuels? Unless we have a breakthough then we'll be using fossil fuels for atleast 2 more decades until we fiugure out how to create clean energy (wind and solar still arent clean, several decades away) or raw hydogen/find enough deposits to mine it.

    • @rexxx777
      @rexxx777 Год назад +1

      It has been normal for thousands of years. As written in 1906, a land of droughts and flooding rains.

    • @anxiousearth680
      @anxiousearth680 Год назад +3

      @@jaydenwilson9522 Better solutions not perfect solutions.
      Nothing is clean. But there are things that are _cleaner_ .
      Renewables are significantly cleaner tham coal or gas that it's not even worth it to compare between them. They're all way better than fossil fuels. Ditto with nuclear.
      According to a life cycle assessment by NREL wind generates 18 grams of Co2 per kw/h. This includes manufacturing and construction.
      Solar 43g.
      Gas 500g.
      Coal 1000g
      These are rough numbers off the top of my head, you can check the source if you wish.
      Source: DW, How clean is solar really?

    • @maleahlock
      @maleahlock Год назад

      @@anxiousearth680 There's no point trying to be rational with them. They're big coal/oil shills.

    • @-opus
      @-opus Год назад

      @@rexxx777 Australia's climate was changed dramatically before europeans arrived due to the locals burning it repeatedly. Things got even worse once the europeans took over.

  • @isidrorsantos3773
    @isidrorsantos3773 Год назад +5

    Don't follow UK decision to shut down power stations and rely on other countries like Russia for energy needs. Look what happened to the UK right now. Because of the support for Ukraine and sanctions against Russia the gas supply from Russia has been switch off. The UK is now freezing. It would take 2 years to be self reliant on energy supply like gas for cooking and heating.

  • @DwainDwight
    @DwainDwight Год назад +6

    as an Australian it completely sickens me just how bad Australia is with regards to saving & conserving the environment. Largely due to mass corruption and ultra poor leadership by successive Australian governments. truly shocking, and depressing

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Год назад +1

      Your anti scientific ban on nuclear energy is what sickens me.

    • @margaretarmstrong2445
      @margaretarmstrong2445 Год назад

      Shocking and depressing, seriously? You have no idea how wind, solar and backup batteries are made do you? Or the impact that their existence has on humanity and the global environment?
      I'm guessing that you think it's OK for 40,000 African children to work in the artisanal cobalt and copper mines in the Congo. And that it isn't unusual for these hand dug mines to collapse and crush these individuals, including children to death. What about those refugees from other parts of Africa who come to make the big money of a few dollars a day. When their children lose their parents to mining incidents or violence there's no family backup to look after these children, no social services. They will do anything they have to do to make enough money to survive. These children suffer unspeakable atrocities, girls not much more than children themselves collecting ore with babies strapped to their backs. Still it's worth it isn't it? We get cheap renewables.
      Same applies to the minority groups in China. Doesn't matter that they are separated from their families and forced into labour camps with barely enough sustenance to keep them alive. Keeps down the cost of renewables.
      Many of the necessary materials mined for the renewables industry result in highly toxic waste by-products. Rare earth processing is one of the worst. These materials are not so much rare as difficult to separated out from the ores. There are many different types of acids and other chemicals used in this process and the resulting waste has varying levels of radiation and is problematic to dispose of. Just one of these processing plants in China has a black toxic sludgy lake which was reported to be ten square kilometres in size. This area was once farmland, they just keep adding sandbags as the depth increases. There are so many more steps in the creation of renewables that creates toxic waste but it would take a few pages to describe them to you and I wouldn't want to depress you.
      I live in a Renewable Energy Zone here in Australia. Wind, solar, backup batteries, substations and new transmission lines will utilise more than 2 hundred square kilometres of agricultural land just near my beautiful historic town alone. The native wildlife and birds that drew us here will be driven out or destroyed. There have been 19 endangered species of native birds identified in our region, plus bats and Koalas. All the developers have to do is purchase certificates and they will be absolved of any responsibility for the loss of these creatures. They want to install 69 wind turbines in our beautiful valley. These turbines will be 7MW and standing at 280m high and 200m wide will be the biggest onshore turbines in the world and almost as tall as Centrepoint Tower whichis the tallest structure in Sydney. They will each sport 3 red flashing aviation lights. I wonder how the flocks of parrots will fare in their attempt to fly in familiar territory. Corellas, Cockatoos, Galahs, Rosellas and Red Rumped Parrots to name a few. The are Wedge Tailed Eagles soaring through this valley and hovering in the very places these towers will spin. Nankeen Kestrels, waterbirds and too many other varieties to name, and many of them endangered. But then you'll no doubt tell me that cats kill way many more birds, so I guess I need to just get over it.
      Shocked and depressed are we petal? You need to get over yourself and take the time to find out what the reality of renewables are. I've only given you part of the story. What are you giving up for your ideological dream? What will happen to this infrastructure in less than twenty years time for most of it? It won't be buried near your place will it, and you won't need to be concerned if it isn't removed at all.

  • @YRG313
    @YRG313 Год назад +34

    "I love a sunburnt country,
    A land of sweeping plains,
    Of ragged mountain ranges,
    Of droughts and flooding rains.
    I love her far horizons,
    I love her jewel-sea,
    Her beauty and her terror -
    The wide brown land for me!"
    Dorothea Mackellar - 1908

    • @margaretarmstrong2445
      @margaretarmstrong2445 Год назад

      ​@@SocialDownclimber What absolute rubbish.

    • @Tasmantor
      @Tasmantor Год назад

      @@margaretarmstrong2445 The droughts and floods will increase (even more) in severity her jewel-sea is bleaching at a rate unprecedented in history but if it all looks good from your perspective of 'head as far as possible up arse' then I guess it's all right!

  • @rhyshackett8268
    @rhyshackett8268 Год назад +4

    Also you should note that coal isn't just used for obsolete coal fired power plants..it's also used in the production of steel and other metals.

    • @margaretarmstrong2445
      @margaretarmstrong2445 Год назад

      It's also an 'ingredient' in the manufacture of silicon ingots for crystalline silicon solar panels. China makes billions of them using coal-fired power plants and furnaces.

  • @UndulatingOlive
    @UndulatingOlive Год назад +8

    Here in Aus, we need more outside pressure, financial pressure to push the necessity of climate action into the mind of our political class

    • @paulsz6194
      @paulsz6194 Год назад +3

      Are you living off grid already?

    • @ingofreehe2168
      @ingofreehe2168 Год назад +3

      Even if Australia would stop using or exporting fossil fuels etc. the rest of the world is still polluting enough for the floods and fires to continue. The only difference now is, that Australia will loose billions of dollars to fight them. It is simply too small to make a difference. I agree the domestic electricity should be based more on renewables. But don't stop selling your resources to other countries !

    • @toozy101
      @toozy101 Год назад +2

      No we don't, we need to look after Australians first.

  • @Truthseeker371
    @Truthseeker371 Год назад +2

    Does anyone talk about conserving energy? Wastage is visible at every Environmentalist's household. How much electricity and food waste can we see? The modern society look for more consumerism rather than conservation.

  • @DeftPol
    @DeftPol Год назад +13

    The other issue that isn’t really addressed is that Australia’s small population size makes even some people that are supportive of action on climate change think that government climate policies are ultimately irrelevant. The thinking goes that Australia may have high per capita emissions, but when your country has less than one 50th the population of our mega energy consuming economies to the north and around one 15th the population of the US, in absolute terms our emissions and actions amount to a drop in the bucket.

    • @mukkaar
      @mukkaar Год назад +2

      Honestly it's weird point, since population is small, it's easier to implement changes.

    • @redsword1659
      @redsword1659 Год назад +1

      See Jones-Credlin presentation of the "grain of rice" fallacy

    • @DeftPol
      @DeftPol Год назад

      @@mukkaar it isn’t when any action proposed gets framed in terms of economic cost that will have to be born by regular people and then the opponents point to the absolute contributions to pollution of countries like China and the US to say that our actions won’t have any impact.

  • @alltimelearner2119
    @alltimelearner2119 Год назад +11

    Problem is, It is very expensive in terms of labour cost and material cost. Plus the vast area of the country make it even harder to distribute electricity.

    • @jdillon8360
      @jdillon8360 Год назад

      Most of the population is spread along the south-east and east coast, with a few million in and around Perth as well. The vast size of Australia isn't as big a factor as people like to claim, considering the population is mostly concentrated along those 2 coastal strips. What's holding back distribution is NIMBY land owners that don't want new transmission running across their land. This is causes higher electricity prices for everyone (including those same landowners who oppose the new lines), and is delaying the connection of new renewable energy sources to the grid. You're right about high labour costs however.

  • @cakapcakep241
    @cakapcakep241 Год назад +17

    So from economic perspectives, Australia economy is pretty much just like Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Qatar which depend too much on mining and raw material export. This is why it is very hard to shift from non-renewable to renewable energy.

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Год назад +1

      At least the UAE has the foresight to decarbonise. They recently built & commissioned the Barakah nuclear power plant, with a fourth reactor to come online in a few years. Meanwhile Australians are still debating whether to repeal their nuclear energy ban.

    • @shakeelali20
      @shakeelali20 Год назад +5

      It really isn't, that's just the myth that's been perpetuated by the fossil fuel and mining lobby for decades now. Most Aussies severely overestimate the size of our mining sector because it's historically what made us wealthy so it's kind of seen with nostalgia. The fact is mining made up just under 6% of our economy in 2022, compared to services which employs nearly 79% of our workforce, and contributes 60-65% of our GDP.

    • @cakapcakep241
      @cakapcakep241 Год назад +4

      @@shakeelali20 Australia mining industry contribute at around 60% of its export structure so Australia is pretty much very dependant on mining industry. Stopping the Australian mining operation will cause an economic crysis.

    • @adrianthoroughgood1191
      @adrianthoroughgood1191 Год назад +1

      ​@@cakapcakep241 Australia also has deposits of uranium lithium and other useful minerals. The coal mining companies need to adapt to these other resources.

    • @SPAJ92
      @SPAJ92 Год назад +1

      Our tourism industry employs more people than mining, but we've chosen to screw the reef until it's all dug up

  • @qolspony
    @qolspony Год назад +6

    United States is 4, but with over 350,000 people far exceeding the countries above in population.
    Sad to see New Zealand on the list of polluters. Especially since their population mirrors a very small country.

    • @morganstevens2522
      @morganstevens2522 Год назад +2

      It comes down to how the data was used.

    • @moochingmarc
      @moochingmarc Год назад

      Calling BS on this statistic - source?

    • @Battleneter
      @Battleneter Год назад +1

      Context is everything, "New Zealand ranks at the top of this list because of extensive deforestation during the 19th century, when much of its native Kauri forest was cleared for its valuable timber. The country’s tiny population at the time consequently had very high annual per-capita emissions, with the cumulative total by 1900 making up around two-thirds of the total amassed by the present day"". .........NZ ranks way down the list if your only looking back 20 years per captia, this graph is VERY misleading.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Год назад

      They started including sheep farts in the calculation, which was supposedly a conspiracy theory until they just openly declared war on agriculture.

    • @qolspony
      @qolspony Год назад

      @@gregorymalchuk272 hmmmm

  • @DanielBrasher
    @DanielBrasher Год назад +44

    It’s validating hearing an international news source call out the Australian Government for its lack of initiative to address climate change.

    • @marktaylor3802
      @marktaylor3802 Год назад

      While the green lie continues we will pretend batteries are going to run the world and that they are green in some way, until we grip reality that nothing made by man can ever be green, so really we can only look at what is least intrusive and that is obviously nuclear power as it is the only reliable 24/7 source that can handle big loads and big load changes.
      Everything has a footprint therefore solar, wind and batteries are very far from ever being able to be called green.
      If we all went vegan we would need all treed/green areas for crop space, no more bush/rainforests or animals!
      We all drive EV cars with a huge carbon footprint before ever driven and hope to balance it out over the life of the mined battery but save nothing on global emmisions in reality because the global freight trains/ships/planes and travel trains/ships/planes do the big emitting not to mention those EVs are being charged off coal a lot of the time.
      This perfect world some are looking for is not in the direction they are going.

    • @ilikevines
      @ilikevines Год назад

      Climate change is just a shaming campaign to force western countries to make their economies less competitive and transfer money to undeveloped countries. The majority of member countries in the UN are resentful and backwards and want to shake down wealthier countries for all they can get.

    • @johnm838
      @johnm838 Год назад +1

      Only a fool would waste money addressing a non-problem.

  • @moony2703
    @moony2703 Год назад +21

    ‘This is coal, don’t be scared, don’t be afraid.’
    Laughing. Oh he is _never_ going to live that down. Australia is _never_ going to let him forget that moment, and good to know the International community is on board with that. XD
    Chris Bowen, now our energy minister, actually reverse the tables later by pulling out a solar panel and basically quoting his words back to him, but less people know about that one.

    • @gilian2587
      @gilian2587 Год назад +3

      There is a type of coal called anthracite that is actually really pretty... not that I think we should be burning the stuff.

    • @legallyfree2955
      @legallyfree2955 Год назад +4

      @@gilian2587 Anthracite coal is used to make steel, where available lower grades of coal are used for energy because it cannot be used for steel making.

    • @gilian2587
      @gilian2587 Год назад +2

      @@legallyfree2955 I actually did not know that.

    • @alwynwatson6119
      @alwynwatson6119 Год назад

      Buy solar makes cheap energy and cheap energy makes a woke new world order of freedom. As far as he is concerned that is more scary than climate change.

  • @Assenayo
    @Assenayo Год назад +18

    I was wondering why this was coming across like it was handwritten by the Greens, then I saw "The Australia Institute" and thought "of course"

  • @bradj6985
    @bradj6985 Год назад +6

    Australian homes all dutifully set up solar panels on our roofs at great expense to save the world. I spent $24000 on my panels. Two years later and there is a glut of solar power on the market. In a desperate move to stay viable, the energy companies cut the solar input rates to nearly nothing, actually switch off solar panels and are lobbying to charge us an input tariff to tax the solar power we import to the grid. Joyfully ejaculating that the Aussies have enough sunlight to solve all of our problems is just another stark indicator that the foreign journalists who put this video together either have no firsthand knowledge of our circumstances or know full well but wish to distort the image to portray Aussies as evil climate monsters.

    • @rexxx777
      @rexxx777 Год назад +2

      Don't treat this video seriously that's all.

    • @bradj6985
      @bradj6985 Год назад +2

      @@rexxx777 as an Aussie, I don’t want to be stereotyped as a climate vandal by journalists who clearly don’t know what they’re talking about….

  • @LuEmanuel
    @LuEmanuel Год назад +16

    Take a look next at Canada. I don't think we're doing so well and I wish that we were doing much more and better.

    • @RB-xq7qh
      @RB-xq7qh Год назад +3

      I see you believed those metrics at the beginning. Its per capita metrics. If a country has a small population like Canada does, it will always be closer to the top. The US is the second largest polluter on the planet but has 300 million people so thats why they’re doing better than Canada according to those metrics. When it comes to who has put more carbon into the atmosphere since industrialization. Its 100% America and not even China can catch up. Germany would be top 5 and the UK would be top 3. Canada wouldn’t even be top 50 because Canada hasnt put much carbon into the atmosphere because the industry is pretty clean. Mostly based on hydro electric and natural gas which burns 41% cleaner than coal. Fun fact. If everyone switch to just natural gas and planted 1 billion more trees we would be within the 2c target. The best thing the world can do right now is to plant more trees. And the worst thing going on right now is deforestation. So thats the #1 thing we have to stop like yesterday.

    • @Euphorica
      @Euphorica Год назад

      We're doing great.

  • @biggiedii4889
    @biggiedii4889 Год назад +6

    This sounds eerily similar to Canada.

  • @TheVoidStares
    @TheVoidStares Год назад +1

    As an Australian. We lost control a long time ago. Most of our media organisations are headed by former top politicians from the coalition of conservatives (the so called Liberal party).
    And then. There’s Murdoch.

  • @calvin_hk
    @calvin_hk Год назад +3

    Our electricity cost is also super expensive, that I never understand why when we are also a coal export country

    • @Matthew-yc6nx
      @Matthew-yc6nx Год назад

      Because of all the globalist climate rules that kneecap our economy, and the corrupt unions as well as selling out all our labour force and production to Asia.

  • @Holy_Frijole
    @Holy_Frijole Год назад +9

    Jon Oliver had a good episode on the bunk carbon offsets. If I recall correctly he made fun of projects that would've been funded anyways for instance so carbon offsets is double dipping and no net positive impact.

    • @adrianthoroughgood1191
      @adrianthoroughgood1191 Год назад +1

      I think you mean Jon Oliver

    • @glennhankins6927
      @glennhankins6927 Год назад +2

      @@adrianthoroughgood1191 You mean the British lunatic?

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Год назад

      Hi Richard, did you already saw our video "Why carbon offsets are worse than you think" ruclips.net/video/61SWIYwCaSE/видео.html We'd love to hear your thoughts in the comments. 🌸

  • @thesesh5629
    @thesesh5629 Год назад +6

    Wales would be a good one. Lots of new acts and regulations that have just been made. Could be a start to a better future. I’ve heard Swansea council might be the people to speak to about stuff related to this

  • @rikulappi9664
    @rikulappi9664 Год назад +2

    Finland, Sweden and Norway produce over 80% of electricity fossil free. Norway is a major oil/gas exporter.

  • @carlramirez6339
    @carlramirez6339 Год назад +10

    Remember that we voted fair and square to vote against a carbon tax. It shows how hard it is for me to convince fellow Australians to shoulder the cost of climate action.

    • @diggs6247
      @diggs6247 Год назад

      A campaign of lies and scaremongering worked a treat with that idea, and it worked because most Australians are simply not interested in the future of their own children. The recent change of government was very likely driven by hard realities such as fires, floods, and plainly visible damage. It was also influenced by the most openly and cynically corrupt government Australia has ever had. To just lift the lid on corruption slightly, look into ROBODEBT. Consumers of the garbage put out by the Murdoch media had no idea of what was really happening, and still don't. Eventually enough of the rest of the population became worried about events and the stench of corruption to vote out the Morrison government.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Год назад +3

      Good. Why would anyone vote for an increase in the price of energy, which would increase the cost of everything? Especially when nuclear isn't being permitted as an alternative.

    • @skygge1006
      @skygge1006 Год назад +2

      @@gregorymalchuk272 nuclear is more expensive than solar and wind. If you want cheap bills solar and wind are the cheapest not nuclear so clearly it’s not pric you care about.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Год назад +1

      @@skygge1006 Variable renewables plus storage are more expensive than nuclear energy.

    • @margaretarmstrong2445
      @margaretarmstrong2445 Год назад

      ​@@skygge1006 Wind and Solar have been pushed hard in the Northern Hemisphere for more than two decades. Not one country has successfully transitioned to wind and solar after all this time and the countries like Germany and the UK and states like SA and California have among the highest electricity prices in the world. They need international interconnectors to top up shortfalls and they purchase oil and gas from other countries. This is after spending trillions of dollars collectively on wind, solar and backup batteries. How is that cheap or reliable?
      You can talk about renewables being the cheapest form of energy all you like but it doesn't make it true. Renewables are intermittent and their output is very poor. Without backup you have no energy system. The backup must be included in the cost of the supply to the grid. Towns, cities, transport and industry cannot run on wind and solar alone.

  • @jonathantan2469
    @jonathantan2469 Год назад +23

    Also interesting to note that Australia chose to prohibit nuclear energy for electricity generation, despite having rich uranium resources & lots of coastal sites far away from major populated areas. This law was passed by the conservative government, who wanted to protect the coal & gas industry. But it was also supported by the left leaning parties, on environmental excuses...
    Had we gone ahead & built several nuclear power stations in the 1990s, we would be mostly weaned off coal & natural gas by now.
    Tasmania only recently became 100% renewable. They could have actually achieved this decades ago in the 1980s, but the environmentalists put a stop on their hydropower program...

    • @spacefacts1681
      @spacefacts1681 Год назад +1

      The conservative party was in power at the time, but the ban bill was passed by Greens/Labor chiefly in votes
      IIRC there were only like 15 MPs in the Senate at the time to vote it in

    • @-opus
      @-opus Год назад +5

      If you want nuclear power, move to France. There are better ways and many of us are thankful for the lack of nuclear power, even though we know they only did it to protect fossil fuel.

    • @thejixor
      @thejixor Год назад +3

      Capital outlay is very high, especially when factoring in waste disposal, and construction takes is longer than one political term. I suspect ultimately they're the main reasons it hasn't been adopted.

    • @EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV
      @EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV Год назад

      Nuclear would have been a great way to power Oz in the late half of the last century...
      Little late now, save our uranium for the aerospace market that will be blooming... :)

    • @gilian2587
      @gilian2587 Год назад

      I had thought that there was a big push for geothermal in Australia?

  • @tomkelly8827
    @tomkelly8827 Год назад +35

    As a Canadian, I can say that you Germans live in a very different world than Canadians and Australians. We both have large countries so transportation costs and emits more because our distances are greater to travel. Canada has cold so we need more energy for heating while Australia has heat so they need more energy for cooling. Here in Canada we also have roads to plow. So it takes more energy because our lives are different than yours are and our environments are different. We mine a lot of minerals to export to countries with larger populations to manufacture into the goods that we all consume.
    Our land areas being vast though means that our plants easily take in all the CO2 that we put out plus the emissions from EU, China, India and others.
    Here in Canada though, trains are needed to make our lives better, not electric cars, those batteries will not do well in this cold

    • @awf6554
      @awf6554 Год назад +5

      Yes. Small populations in very large countries means the carbon emissions per capita are high.

    • @jk-gi7sh
      @jk-gi7sh Год назад +4

      Your comment is very understandable. But the question is what should these countries do ? And it is a question of the survival of humanity on this planet in the long run .
      I understand that changing From one type of industry to another takes time and previous investment must be recovered with profit. That's why it is difficult to go from fossil fuel to renewable when capital and profit are taken as factors.
      Then again I would argue that when our survival is at stake all investments are justified if they create sustainable solutions like mass transportation ( railways) , reducing emissions from agricultural, promoting cohabitation and green spaces in cities , water recycling, finding ways to evade plastic . It is easier said than done but if we don't change things about how we live,we shall perish.
      So i would argue that not just fossil fuel but many areas are required to be looked after for a sustainable future.

    • @russellhorsefield9199
      @russellhorsefield9199 Год назад

      IF we kept the minerals to ourselves the whole world would be screwed. Maybe that is what it might take to sought out this great planet before the bastards like Rupert Murdoch stuffs it up for everyone.

    • @howlingowl9289
      @howlingowl9289 Год назад +2

      Here in Australia we produce way more than we need with regard to coal and gas. All this extra mining isn't for the benefit of our country but a simple exploitation of our resources by the mining companies (usually foreign). It's about time our government grew some balls and did the right thing for our country. When we voted the Coalition out and Labor in we were saying that we wanted to go full steam on renewables and an end to the corruption. It now seems that the fossil fuel companies are beginning to get this government onside as well.

    • @AuJohnM
      @AuJohnM Год назад

      @@jk-gi7sh Survival of humanity? LMHO! Get your head out of social media nonsense and read what some decent scientists are saying.

  • @gpsfinancial6988
    @gpsfinancial6988 Год назад +3

    Understandably there are lots of comments about New Zealand's emissions. They could definitely improve, but much of the problem is measurement. New Zealand is a massive carbon sink. Unlike many other countries almost 30% of the country is preserved in National parks, there is no credit given for preserving existing trees. If your country cut down all of it's forest and you plant one, you are a goodie, if you had 100 million trees and you cut one down you are a baddie. The other big negative for New Zealand is exporting food (dairy being the "worst" example). If you feed 20 million people with a population of 5 million, most of the CO2 generated by producing the food counts against the exporter, not the importer or consumer. The fact that if the importer produced the food at home it would create more carbon than buying from a more efficient producer does not count in the carbon counting game. Transferring emissions to someone less efficient is bad for the planet, but good for your score.

    • @moochingmarc
      @moochingmarc Год назад

      What is the source of this statistic? NZ power generation is ~80% renewal at the worst of times which is roughly half of total energy consumption. NZ doesn't have much in the way of large industry like steel refining either so it is hard to fathom how NZ could possibly be the worst CO2 polluter per capita. Methane on the other hand though...

  • @whatwilljustdid
    @whatwilljustdid Год назад +10

    Canada! Similar story to Australia

  • @joec2446
    @joec2446 Год назад +5

    Look at Canada! Image of green but have policies of oil, natural gas and lumber.

  • @ronanonline3515
    @ronanonline3515 Год назад +5

    Please do the worst accumulated emissions per capita country. It's beautiful "clean green", "100% pure" New Zealand!!!! It would be great to see the difference between the way the country portrays itself and the facts.

    • @raclark2730
      @raclark2730 Год назад

      What the F dose per capita mean if there are barley any people. Other than cultish guilt assignment.

    • @raclark2730
      @raclark2730 Год назад +1

      Says 7.1 tones per capita according to a graph I am seeing now, just goes to show DW is full of it.

  • @R1981L
    @R1981L Год назад +4

    I'm not a climate change denier but Australia has always and always will have disastrous floods and bushfires, simple fact

  • @dekumutant
    @dekumutant Год назад +6

    We also have some of the highest uptake of home solar in the world, hopefully things are looking up

  • @colinframpton6118
    @colinframpton6118 Год назад +3

    In 1999 Australia COAL made 87% of all electrical power mow in 2022 it's 28 .9%

    • @Battleneter
      @Battleneter Год назад +1

      nah mate that's way off, gas and coal is still in the 70% region.

    • @margaretarmstrong2445
      @margaretarmstrong2445 Год назад

      Colin installed capacity of wind and solar has nothing to do with the 'output', which is a fraction of the quoted nameplate.

  • @dcptiv
    @dcptiv Год назад +2

    You do know that all these solar panels & batteries for EV require mining to exist. Countries need coal for power because they just don't have the infrastructure to use anything else nor can they afford the latest energy tech. These people also don't understand how many people would be unemployed & freight business's collapse if coal mining stopped without a very long time to wind down. I work in freight & so much of it is mining parts or mining related since I live in a mining area.

  • @iangray7904
    @iangray7904 Год назад +7

    I’m so glad China and Indian are on board with all this

    • @piratepete4322
      @piratepete4322 Год назад +6

      This mob will miss the irony.😂

    • @definitlynotbenlente7671
      @definitlynotbenlente7671 Год назад

      China has one of the largest hydro electric dams in the world

    • @VARMOT123
      @VARMOT123 Год назад

      If india emitted per capita like australia has done, there wouldn't have been any planet left a century ago

  • @KiwiG2020
    @KiwiG2020 Год назад +9

    Also South Australia have enough solar to power the whole state! Bravo 😃 WA was one of the trial grounds for Tesla battery storage and one of the mines is solar powered so they are making changes at the state level ahead of the federal government. They’ve been proactive on recycling plants in Queensland. There a massive solar farm planned in the Northern Territory. I think the feasibility assessment has been completed as this will supply energy to Singapore via a pipeline as well as the Northern Territory so they ARE making inroads and I love them for it! But yeah… buying carbon credits to protect trees in another country is a bit shonky!

    • @moony2703
      @moony2703 Год назад +2

      ‘Enough power to power the whole state’ and then some! XD They had to start turning a heap off when they lost their second connector to the other states again because they couldn’t export the overflow! They could have really used a heap more batteries and vehicle to grid electric cars to sink the overflow into when that happened.
      Also they need to automate turning things off and on because they had to keep ramping things up and down and there was one guy from on of the solar analysis companies, who are usually mostly just looking at things like solar efficiency etc not helping control the grid on a state level, who was like ‘someone needs to take over the big red button because I’m at my father in laws birthday party and I’m about to burn the sausages!’ Things were getting a little crazy in the working overtime to stop the state grid melting down apartment. XD

    • @awc900
      @awc900 Год назад +2

      You forget the diesel generators at Torrens Island run regularly to top up the renewables in South Australia. Oops, nobodies supposed to mention that.😀

    • @scott_itall8638
      @scott_itall8638 Год назад +2

      It will only power Tenant Creek nothing else.

    • @KiwiG2020
      @KiwiG2020 Год назад

      @@awc900 A top up is different from being fully reliant on polluting energy though. I think we’ll need a back up source “just in case” even in the future.

    • @awc900
      @awc900 Год назад

      @@KiwiG2020 That's where SMRs would do the job.

  • @rhyshackett8268
    @rhyshackett8268 Год назад +2

    Because we have to transport goods across vast amounts of land have many resource based companies... we are the cleanest and safest bulk mining country in the world.
    And if we don't mine where will u get your minerals from?

  • @mr2c289
    @mr2c289 Год назад +2

    I normally like DW reporting. However, as an Australian the video looks a bit "written from the outside looking in". While it has areas of truth, I think it also has areas of misunderstanding. Up front I want to say - I personally want faster clean energy related change in Australia, but I also recognise that we also need policies that meet our energy needs in the interim - the problem is that the requirement for change is also urgent.
    An area of truth in the piece is the lack of policies on environmental issues of former conservative government policies. However, despite its release only a month ago, the piece doesn't really recognise the conservatives were booted out of government in the last Australian Federal Election back in May 2022 - partly because the broader Australian population was concerned by the former conservative government's outdated views and lack of environmental credentials. In that context, the use of outdated articles, and aged interviews with conservative side politicians no longer in power was a bit unbalanced - Tony Abbott lost the Federal Election in 2015, and hasn't been in politics since 2019 - why is he, and his views made a focus in the article? - although admittedly, Australia still has hangovers from former conservative policies, and faster commitments to environmental change need to be made.
    State Governments (as opposed to Federal Governments) also have policies, and influence, the adoption and support of clean energy (- via transition to solar PV system subsidies etc.) - no mention of that in the piece, just a focus on conservative Federal politics, and interviews from these former members of Parliament (both of whom were not popular with large sectors of the Australian population and had hardline views not aligned with much of the population) from a side of government that changed a year ago. Again, this video was only released a month ago.
    Re the Australian Conservative Media: the conservative media focuses on the pay for view sector - Skye news etc - which has more limited reach than other news sources. Agree this media present conservative, slanted views - but when the video presents comments and extracts from videos of conservative media in the context of its the effect on the Australian people's thinking, a more balanced explanation of its reach in the population would be helpful. Again, 12 months ago the Australian population booted out the government that this conservative media supports.
    I think the video also shows a lack of understanding (or alternatively doesn't make the effort to properly explain) the clean energy position in Australia - it mentions Victoria and Qld moving away from coal - but the problem is really that that Vic is still fairly coal and gas dependent (not sure about Qld) - Vic might move away from coal, but it will then move to gas (better, but still not clean or renewable) - I understand its a pretty similar situation in NSW. Vic and NSW are our two largest States - question whether movement from coal to gas should be presented as such a big positive. Tasmania's great 100% clean energy (hydro power based) usage was noted, but nothing said about South Australia which has has one of the largest solar expansions, solar farms and wind farm expansions in the country, and is also often powered entirely on renewables for long periods. My point - Australia is changing - agreed, not fast enough - but people outside Australia should get the impression change is not happening here.
    The crux of our renewables problem is that we have too much solar power in the day, but solar (and other renewable forms) doesn't cover energy demand at night when solar generation is non existent. Battery technology is still too expensive for much of the population to afford (I personally have installed a solar and battery system). People in Germany and other European countries would not like to be told they must rely only on renewables for power, and cant use any gas - we cant either.
    We are transitioning to EVs - take up accelerating quite quickly - but the infrastructure isn't there yet to support the charging requirements of driving the long distances between our population centres and power supplies, and it has the potential to affect our power networks quite substantially. If EVs are charged using fossil fuel based power generation, its still a problem.
    Finally, we use a lot of our energy in the mining sector - but its not concentrated in coal mining - a lot is used mining iron ore, critical minerals, copper etc - most of which is exported to other countries. That is, in Australia we still use a lot of (non renewable) energy supplying other countries with resources they need - we can use less energy, if you guys stop buying things that require the resources. Sometimes its easy for countries with economies not driven lots by the resource sector to be critical, while simultaneously using the goods made from the energy intensive resources.

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Год назад

      Thanks for your extensive response. 🌸 Good point about the May 2022 election outcome that speaks for itself. Our videos are compact and they will not fit everything in. Change is still slow and the cessation of emissions by 2050 without an actual plan to back it up is one of the most important aspects for future.

  • @itt2055
    @itt2055 Год назад +1

    Just the rooftop solar power in Adelaide South Australia produces over 3 times the electricity needs for the city, but due to the privatisation of electricity production, the coal burning power stations are still being used. If you combine the solar and wind farms, South Australia produces over 10 times the electricity needs for the entire state, so there is no need for fossil fuels to produce electricity. If you combine rooftop wind and solar power systems with a system of closed loop hydroelectric power stations strategically placed throughout a city, you can easily produce enough electricity for any modern city. The biggest problem is that the fossil fuel industry spends billions bribing politicians and spreading lies and disinformation about renewable energy systems, Australians want to change, but first the corruption must end then electricity production must be placed in the hands of the government and removed from private companies.

  • @blengi
    @blengi Год назад +11

    australia being so huge and relatively under populated actually has a positive ecological footprint according to the data, even though their per capita co2 production is high ie Australia as a nation actually absorbs more than it emits. Aren't aussies allowed to trade on this natural resource advantage which benefits the world?

    • @tctommie68
      @tctommie68 Год назад

      Benefits humans, not this planet.

    • @blengi
      @blengi Год назад +1

      @@tctommie68 but australia is a massive carbon sink regardless of human emissions unlike china or japan which egregiously use the carbon resources of the world way beyond their geographic carrying capacity. Shouldn't australia be able to benefit from that fact instead of being naively penalizing because superficially use more when the have so much more to use in the first place? It's like saying australia has to be a natural sink by decree to compensate for over populated regions of the world that have purposely created negative ecological footprints. One doesn't tell people of a country with massive fresh water resources to limit their use and export the excess to the world because some people live in countries where their water resources are highly restricted...

    • @VARMOT123
      @VARMOT123 Год назад

      You shouldn't even be there . Imagine being colonizers from Europe who decreased their population density and occupied 3 other continents.carbon sink would be much higher if you guys went back to Europe eh

  • @russellmcdonald1964
    @russellmcdonald1964 Год назад +3

    The answer is simple, the Murdoch press is most influential and sells editorials to the wealthiest....who are the fossil fuel industry.

  • @thaiga
    @thaiga Год назад +29

    I'd rather live in Australia than anywhere else. We definitely care about our environment

    • @jeremyk9400
      @jeremyk9400 Год назад

      Many of us simply don't care about Climate change/global warming propaganda coming from the United Nations and WEF.

    • @-opus
      @-opus Год назад

      Worse places to be, but it is obvious that the majority of Australians and the government do not care about the environment at all.

    • @VARMOT123
      @VARMOT123 Год назад +1

      Lol you care by being one of the world's worst per capita emitters and your top two exports as iron ore and coal . It is an indigenous genocidal land that got rich by selling minerals

    • @CreateLabs
      @CreateLabs Год назад

      Which means absolutely nothing at all given the fact this isn't able immigration, but climate action to save the planet

  • @rocinante4609
    @rocinante4609 Год назад +2

    The public mood has begun to shift in the last few yrs. Environmentally friendly policies are becoming more popular. We don't know how long this will continue but there's a feeling that things can't go back to business as usual.

  • @mwmentor
    @mwmentor Год назад +1

    South Africa, where policy seems to be run on how much money will be made out of the project for the government, rather than what’s good for the environment, and thus the population of tomorrow.

  • @attilaabonyi8879
    @attilaabonyi8879 Год назад +3

    It would be amazing if DW could do a piece on sweden and it's hidden emmision's that it has been hidding since the 90's

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Год назад +1

      Hey Attila 😊 Thanks for the input! Do you have any more links to resources as a start? ✨

    • @attilaabonyi8879
      @attilaabonyi8879 Год назад

      @@DWPlanetA if this info is not good enough for a start you can ask me or contact me if you ask for that.

    • @attilaabonyi8879
      @attilaabonyi8879 Год назад

      Weird i put out a comment with sources and I can't see them here

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Год назад

      Hey Attila 😊 oh, something must have gone wrong. We cannot see the sources either. Could you post them again? Thank you!✨

  • @aryp1622
    @aryp1622 Год назад +9

    Surprised at the end you didn't mention South Australia having almost 80% of its power coming from intermittent renewables (solar and wind), a one-of-a-kind type of grid

    • @bartosz7170
      @bartosz7170 Год назад

      Typical german thing

    • @margaretarmstrong2445
      @margaretarmstrong2445 Год назад

      It's actually 70% nameplate capacity, but that does not relate to output. They also rely on a major gas plant and they use diesel for backup too. During times of severe wind drought they call on other states through interconnectors. This will prove to be a problem since we just lost 10% of our energy supply in NSW. The fact that South Australia's population is only 1.8 million makes it a bit more manageable.

    • @aryp1622
      @aryp1622 Год назад

      @@margaretarmstrong2445 this is actually how much power was supplied from renewables as per AEMO. As for the nameplate capacity it is more than our general demand with more being installed. At the moment there are some shortfalls so the Torrens Island gas power plant is fired up, though the share of this is getting less over time with a lot of power being imported from Vic during shortfalls. With Project Energy Connect interconnector, it will allow more renewables to pass to and from the other states, along with the installation of synchronous condensors which will increase the grids inertia from the lack of spinning reserves. Sure it may not be windy/sunny all the time, but surely Aus being such a big country, it'd be sunny/windy somewhere else. SA is far ahead than most and is moving at great pace. It's a real shame QLD and NSW are quite behind with high use of coal - this is decreasing as we speak (eg with the Liddell power station being decommissioned), with more investment heading towards renewable energy projects nationwide.

    • @margaretarmstrong2445
      @margaretarmstrong2445 Год назад

      ​@@aryp1622 It still comes down to your small population. It will be harder to meet the demands of the three eastern states. I'm not sure why you think that closing Liddell is a good thing. NSW has just lost 10% of reliably delivered 24/7 energy supply. Renewables might be working for SA at the moment but once the roll-out of wind and solar begins in earnest there are going to be problems.
      And you don't need to tell me about the extent of renewables roll-out in Australia either, I have the misfortune of living in a Renewable Energy Zone and the environmental and social impact is devastating. This has nothing to do with saving the planet, even if it needed saving. It's purely a land grab and a redistribution of wealth.
      There is very little Australian content in the the renewables industry here. We purchase 90% of our renewables infrastructure from China, where's the energy security in that? Almost all of the developers are from overseas and set up small dollar shelf companies to call themselves an Australian company. These developers mostly sell the projects early on, sometimes as soon as they're approved, that's where the profits are and these profits are going overseas. One thin film cadmium/ tellurium solar project 4 kilometres from our home is on to It's third owner and it was only commissioned in 2019. This project has been plagued with problems and was last sold at a third of what it cost to build. It caught fire last week but fortunately benign conditions kept the flames low and the toxic panels didn't ignite. The wires were damaged on 18 hectares of panels but I think they had to shut down the whole 87MW project to establish what the cause.
      The promise of jobs is a joke too. The unemployment rate out here in the regions is low, certainly here it's 2.4%. The populations in the towns that will be surrounded by wind and solar are small, ours is 2,700 so where are all these workers supposed to come from? One of the big solar projects out at Wellington NSW had 550 backpackers during peak build, they had to build camps for them. There are kilometres of solar panels out there now, all from China owned by foreign parent companies and built largely by foreign workers. And all this on agricultural land of which Australia has a total of only 6%. The communities out there are broken.
      They are up to 32 projects so far for our region and two hundred square kilometres of agricultural land will be utilised for some of that just next to our beautiful historic town. Just one wind/solar project near us will utilise 13 square kilometres (1,300 hectares) for the solar and 77 square kilometres (7,700 hectares) of agricultural land for the 69 wind turbines each one 7MW and standing at 280m high and 200m wide. This one project will also include two substations and 11 kilometres of its own transmission lines. These turbines will start a few kilometres from town and will be be situated in our valley where countless varieties of birds fly, many of them in flocks. Many different varieties of parrots, birds of prey including the Wedge Tailed Eagle, owls, waterbirds and different bat species. There have been 19 endangered species of birds identified in our region and all the developers have to do is purchase certificates and they will be absolved of any responsibility for the loss of these creatures. They are up to 800 wind turbines so far across the 32 projects with more to come.
      Renewables only work part-time and most of it doesn't even last for 20 years. You want to remind me of why I should be happy about wind and solar destroying my sense of place? And tearing apart my community?

  • @nigelhickman2274
    @nigelhickman2274 Год назад +11

    Couple of interesting factoids to sink your battleship...
    1.
    The European Geosciences Union did a deep dive into Australia's emissions for 2015.
    They found that Australia (the continent) absorbed more CO2 than Australia (the land & people) emitted, & by a large margin.
    Which means that Australia has not just been carbon neutral, but has actually done some pretty heavy lifting since the start of the industrial revolution in reducing the amount of CO2 worldwide.
    2.
    Australia has always been a place of climate extremes and whilst many are trying to link that extremism to current notions of climate change - there is scant evidence to support those assertions - the worst Droughts, Floods and Fires recorded have all occurred & been recorded in 19th century.
    3.
    If Australia grows fruit & veg and exports those fruit & veg for consumption overseas, Australia owns the emmisions in growing that fruit and veg,
    BUT somehow if Australia exports fossil fuels, it should be further held accountable for how those fossil fuels are consumed overseas?
    To highlight the problem examine this simple question...
    Does Germany accept responsibility for the CO2 lifetime emissions from every German manufactured car, truck and vehicle sold & exported throughout the world?
    4.
    Cheap renewable energy is an oxymoron.
    Renewable energy is not cheap, because it requires A) enormous government subsidies to make it profitable AND B) because of it's intermittent nature requires 100% backup with traditional fossil fuel energy sources - meaning that everyone is paying for energy twice over.
    5.
    Sky news is a subscription only TV Channel, whereas Australia boasts a network of 5 free to air providers with 26 separate channels.
    The evil Murdochracy owns just 25% if all newspaper mastheads in Australia, it's outsized influence is in that is sells 80% of all newspapers sold - they must be selling the newspapers that people want to read.
    6.
    Australia is a paradox, because 90% of all Australians live within 60 kilometres of the coastline - and it has 34 000 kilometres of coastline.
    Russia is longest country in the world with a length of 9000 kilometres.
    Imagine how much additional infrastructure Australia has to provide to meet residents basic needs vs any other country in the world...

    • @nigelliam153
      @nigelliam153 Год назад +1

      Too true. There is nothing unprecedented about the current temperature changes compared to the holiscene records. There is nothing unprecedented about the rate of temperature change compared to the holiscene records.
      4 interglacial warm periods in the last 460 000 years have been warmer than our current interglacial warm period even though co2 was around 250ppm.
      The more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, the bigger ghe carbon sinks become ie greening of the planet.

    • @Vanessa-qj5hj
      @Vanessa-qj5hj Год назад +1

      Thank you Nigel for pointing the facts 👍 Unfortunately it's a wasted effort. No one here will believe it true. We have to overhaul the education system.

    • @nigelliam153
      @nigelliam153 Год назад

      @@Vanessa-qj5hj yes it's all been politicized. All it takes is a bit of effort to do the research Into our climates history. And as Nigel Farage stated about the UK,
      Climate change has resulted in the greatest transfer of wealth from the poor to the wealthy.

  • @XICO-xl7jx
    @XICO-xl7jx Год назад +1

    The mining industry is pretty harmful but climate change should not be politicised. Because it relies on lobbying, rare earth minerals mining is pretty harmful.

  • @itt2055
    @itt2055 Год назад +1

    The reason why Australia has one of the worst climate policies is the Abbott and Morrison government combined with the lies of the fossil fuel industry. Currently Adelaide south Australia produces over 3 times the electricity that it can use every day just from rooftop solar but due to the agreement made at the time of privatisation the base electricity load must be created by fossil fuels. We actually have the technology and resources to be fossil fuel free worldwide in under 2 years but we lack the intelligence and willingness to use it. Because renewable energy sources are so much cheaper than fossil fuels the world economy would collapse and governments will lose the majority of their funding if we change from fossil fuels to renewable environmentally friendly alternatives. Forest offsets and carbon credits are actually not the answer because trees cannot absorb the amounts needed even if all land is covered in forests including all farms, cities and roads. Carbon credits are just a scam that doesn't do anything except allow companies to falsely claim they are carbon neutral, carbon credits are just made up and given to companies that pay for them but they are not linked to any carbon capture or reduction in emissions they are fake. Basically the fossil fuel industry makes to much money and uses it to keep their control over governments even tho they know that they are causing the extinction of the human race. Unless we stop using fossil fuels in the next 2 years we will become extinct in less than 80 years and in less than 40 years the world map will change because the majority of countries will no longer exist and the world's population will be around a quarter of what it is now due to wars famine and extreme weather conditions. Basically it is to late so don't have children because they have no future. People alive today will be the last humans to exist.

  • @crypticTV
    @crypticTV Год назад +5

    5:40 Australian corruption
    7:10 Rupert Murdoch
    11:30 offsetting
    11:50 climate villain

  • @matthewwilliams647
    @matthewwilliams647 Год назад +3

    As a proud Aussie, this was the last time I view this channel

    • @Tailspin80
      @Tailspin80 10 месяцев назад

      That’s a bit pathetic. Ostrich strategy.

  • @RechtmanDon
    @RechtmanDon Год назад +4

    People often point to China as the world's largest source of CO2, which is true. But the deception is a consequence of population. Please do a per capita assessment. (Note that India by this standard is one of the least CO2 polluting nations.)

    • @Tailspin80
      @Tailspin80 10 месяцев назад +1

      India’s population is rising fast. Perversely this helps their per capita CO2 as they roll out more coal fired power stations.

  • @GoodLordandGod
    @GoodLordandGod Год назад +2

    Can you shed some lights on why Germany keep relying on Russian gas?

  • @henrytang2203
    @henrytang2203 Год назад +2

    If Australia doesn't export coal and gas, other countries will fill in gaps in the market. Other countries with less mining regulations and less ethical work practices. You can limit global emissions with more EVs and solar panels. That sector is growing.

  • @chazzagames755
    @chazzagames755 Год назад +3

    As an Aussie, I don't like the pollution but I also understand that coal mining and mining together including iron, gold, nickel, cobalt etc. This is what keeps the country alive and is the money paying for our renewables.
    Although another important point is that yes Australia doesn't have as many people as the US or China or Canada but our population is a lot more vastly spread which is one of the bigger reasons its hard to convert because everythings a great distance as well as a lot the land that could be used for solar and wind is protected and miles away.

  • @0michelleki020
    @0michelleki020 Год назад +6

    The forest fires can easily be explained it's often always because of bad forrest manegement.
    The "extreme" heat is because of the Milankovitch Cycle (Earths orbit around the sun).
    Because of the Milankovitch Cycle Australia receives 7% more sun exposure when its summer in Australia, and 7% less sun exposure when it's winter in Australia.
    On the Northern hemisphere it's the other way around, with 7% more less sun exposure when its summer, and 7% higher sun exposure when it's winter.
    There's so much more to our climate than human made CO2.

  • @firefighterJP
    @firefighterJP Год назад +4

    Greed and selfishness is alive and strong. What's interesting is the energy companies in Australia seem to levy the same amount of sway on politicians there as they do here in the United States. Same tactics.

    • @paulsz6194
      @paulsz6194 Год назад +4

      SME could be said for some of the people who are promoting solar...they are in it for what they can get out of it.
      Nuclear is a great clean and sustainable power generation form.

    • @-opus
      @-opus Год назад

      @@paulsz6194 Does this not apply to all of the nutters promoting nuclear on every power thread on youtube?

    • @paulsz6194
      @paulsz6194 Год назад +1

      @@-opus Is there some sort of Nuclear-Power station stock or holding company on the ASX? How are they profiting from promoting it?
      Anyone with the capital can get involved in marketing & selling solar panels, as the government is subsidising them, are they not?
      As far as I’m aware, there are no subsidies for nuclear, am I right?

    • @-opus
      @-opus Год назад

      @@paulsz6194 You tell me, you are one of the ones basically spamming it... Hopefully you all go for a group retreat at Chernobyl soon.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Год назад +1

      It's not greed. Australia is exactly what the USA would look like if they didn't have shale gas. They would burn huge amounts of coal for electricity generation.

  • @tokarteam1
    @tokarteam1 Год назад +1

    Australian here. I cannot understand our government either. We have so much money to make the transition and yet nothing is done.
    It’s pathetic. When we have the most powerful and reliable sunlight on the planet 🤷‍♂️

  • @dfodiego
    @dfodiego Год назад +2

    Please talk about Brazil! Our country is perceived as a protagonist on climate change but is not true. We have the forests but the deforestation too.
    How the redd+ projects is overestimated and why there is so many junkies offsets about it.
    The importance of reforestation, projects tha remove CO2 and not just avoid emissions could be the future.

  • @asthmatictuna
    @asthmatictuna Год назад +6

    Always interesting to see other countries takes on ours. Pretty bang on I must say. Curious to hear about EU not allowing forest offsets and limiting their use. We could certainly stand to be doing so much better.

  • @coreydark8795
    @coreydark8795 Год назад +14

    We Australia produce very little emissions thank you very much. We produce less than 2% of global emissions. We don't have a climate issue. We've always had fired floods and droughts. What issues we do have is lack of doing controlled burn offs. No land has ever been stolen. We have issues with floods because we don't build enough dams and towns built in flood areas. There is nothing wrong with coal. Australia needs coal because we don't have nuclear power and we can't pay for wind as it's more expensive and not reliable. We manufacture many things which need cheap reliable power. Only way forward for Australia unless it goes nuclear is to build new coal fired power plants which are at least 70% cleaner than current ones. But hey you don't live here in Australia so what would you know ..

    • @darrenglasson7200
      @darrenglasson7200 Год назад +7

      A land of droughts and flooding rain's

    • @coreydark8795
      @coreydark8795 Год назад +4

      @@darrenglasson7200 A men brother. Yes it poem is very true. Sadly government doesn't want to make it drought resistant aka Bradfield scheme and other dams etc

    • @rexxx777
      @rexxx777 Год назад +3

      Don't take this seriously that's all.

    • @samcro8311
      @samcro8311 Год назад +4

      100% agree with everything you pointed out well said

    • @VARMOT123
      @VARMOT123 Год назад +1

      You are an indigenous genocidal land that sells iron ore and coal . Your population share is 0.3% you clown . Go back to your ancestral land

  • @littlecatfeet9064
    @littlecatfeet9064 Год назад +6

    Thank you for calling us out! Saving this video to share.

    • @ingofreehe2168
      @ingofreehe2168 Год назад

      Even if Australia would stop using or exporting fossil fuels etc. the rest of the world is still polluting enough for the floods and fires to continue. The only difference now is, that Australia will loose billions of dollars to fight them. It is simply too small to make a difference. I agree the domestic electricity should be based more on renewables. But don't stop selling your resources to other countries !

  • @michaelfabish-wood4444
    @michaelfabish-wood4444 Год назад +1

    Solar/wind power is also only a small % of the problem. We need mass energy storage to complete the transition. The technology exists, now let’s get it all in place.

  • @rickadrian2675
    @rickadrian2675 Год назад +13

    It's interesting that the statistics at the start, while correct, also conceal some other truths. Our country has a large economy for a small population partly because of the massive turnover created by our fossil fuel sales to other countries, our small population means that we don't have economy of scale for manufacturing but still have vast transport costs (and emissions) when we do. You are also right that we have not kept pace with other countries on climate efforts WE HAVE EXCEEDED THEM AND LEFT YOU BEHIND. An inconvenient truth you have left out is that we have the highest solar wattage output per capita and the highest percentage of solar contribution to total consumption. We also have the highest rooftop solar uptake in the world. This is what Australians do despite our governments and media as we have to put our hand in our own pockets and pay for these ourselves, this did not happen overnight. As an Australian I would pay more taxes to make private financial donations to political parties illegal. Given that this was released 6 hours ago I am also surprised that you missed that a massive new coal mine was knocked back a month ago and that coal power plants are being closed early.

    • @moony2703
      @moony2703 Год назад +4

      Unfortunately said mine was only knocked back because it was too close to a certain massive tourist attraction that the rest of the globe have spent years breathing down the Australian government’s neck on as they increasingly hard to put it on the endangered list and the previous Australian government tried to stop them with increasingly more obvious stalling and paperthin excuses.
      Unfortunately the current laws don’t protect other parts of Australia from mining in the same way.

    • @rickadrian2675
      @rickadrian2675 Год назад +2

      @@moony2703 So you agree that it was knocked back, excellent. No comment on us beating the rest of the world in solar? OK..

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Год назад

      Legalize nuclear energy and you could have decarbonized electricity like France did by the 1980s.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Год назад

      @@rickadrian2675 You're beating the rest of the world in electricity prices, too.

    • @margaretarmstrong2445
      @margaretarmstrong2445 Год назад +1

      ​@@gregorymalchuk272 Our electricity has risen most significantly since the push for renewables starting around a decade ago. Just like any country that has large numbers of wind and solar projects, they also have amongst the high electricity prices in the world.

  • @mikehogan9265
    @mikehogan9265 Год назад +5

    What a lot of tripe. Unfortunately too many Australians have caught this climate religion which is based on emotion and not science.

    • @DJ-yj1vg
      @DJ-yj1vg Год назад +1

      Exactly

    • @Vanessa-qj5hj
      @Vanessa-qj5hj Год назад

      True brah

    • @RiverWhiskey07
      @RiverWhiskey07 9 месяцев назад

      Yes, and I'd like to see how well an Australian " all electric" road train would handle some of the toughest roads in the land while transporting heavy mining, electrical generators and other types of the things required for basic life in remote towns in the outback. Them battery packs would cost the earth to replace in a truck.

  • @Thebreakdownshow1
    @Thebreakdownshow1 Год назад +7

    I think it is down to the fact Australia is like Saudi Arabia but instead of Oil they depend on selling their biggest export.

    • @willemhuiskamp
      @willemhuiskamp Год назад +1

      Except we don't. Not only did the video show that the fossil fuel industry makes up a miniscule amount of our GDP, the profits of these companies are barely even taxed, with most of the money going offshore. It is out and out corruption of the political system, nothing more, nothing less.

    • @grandslapper
      @grandslapper Год назад +1

      Not really. As the guy pointed out, coal only contributes 1.4% to GDP. But the people who sell it are extremely rich, are good at lobbying and have powerful friends in the media.

    • @czarkusa2018
      @czarkusa2018 Год назад +1

      I'd love to be like Saudi Arabia but the majority of these megaprofits go overseas.

    • @paulfri1569
      @paulfri1569 Год назад

      Bingo!

  • @PapaphobiaPictures
    @PapaphobiaPictures Год назад +2

    It's so disenfranchising being here when we see the absolute potential of this land to generate the industry of the future but our leaders don't have ambition beyond digging dirt from the ground

    • @astra6712
      @astra6712 Год назад +1

      It’s 80% desert.

    • @PapaphobiaPictures
      @PapaphobiaPictures Год назад

      @Astra 671 great for solar. Plus the Australian desert isn't barren like the Sahara or other deserts. There's plenty of opportunities for biofuel production, decentralised energy production, carbon negative industries. Hell, even our natural gas could undergo methane pyrolysis instead to produce hydrogen and capture the carbon in solid state char naturally to stop it emitting carbon into the air. Plus all that coastline to work off too

  • @polarbearfelly
    @polarbearfelly Год назад +1

    Please look at the UK next, as I'm fascinated to know what their progress is.
    Another one could be Indonesia, as they are a rising power in the world.

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Год назад

      If you're interested in Indonesia, you might be interested in our video on the new capital city, Nusantara ☞ ruclips.net/video/Bt289hq2T8k/видео.html
      Check it out and let us kow what you think in the comments 🙃

  • @puffinjuice
    @puffinjuice Год назад +6

    Just because a country looks clean and green doesn't mean that it's people are! The same is true for New Zealand

  • @aaronfield7899
    @aaronfield7899 Год назад +12

    Finally! A video which the United States is not the bad guy.

    • @bottleflaskan802
      @bottleflaskan802 Год назад +4

      They are always the bad guy

    • @normanclatcher
      @normanclatcher Год назад +1

      We are bad guy. But this does not mean we are bad guy.

    • @KiwiG2020
      @KiwiG2020 Год назад

      😂

    • @czarkusa2018
      @czarkusa2018 Год назад +1

      The problem is, the CIA has removed any politician in Australia that would have done good.

    • @aaronfield7899
      @aaronfield7899 Год назад

      @@czarkusa2018 you mean the American CIA?

  • @woodybalfour8213
    @woodybalfour8213 Год назад +3

    Thanks you DW...Very on point and succinct. Good on you for naming News Ltd You missed naming Gina and IPA Institute of Public Affairs

  • @FrankSustainAMustly
    @FrankSustainAMustly Год назад +1

    Despite all the bad from past inaction, I think there is still real hope for the future of sustainability in Australia. Especially as a global leader in decentralisation of energy infrastructure through uptake of rooftop solar PV. This doesn't solve the problem just yet, because there are a range of issues to be solved to increase renewables to even 98% of our electricity supply. Unfortunately there is no magic switch to change an entire energy infrastructure overnight, even if Australia does have the natural resources to make it possible. Massive appreciation to the engineers solving these problems!

  • @jasonbrown6719
    @jasonbrown6719 Год назад

    plz do an article on how climate change is affecting NewZealand and include how ash from Australia's bush ended up on NewZealand's Southern Alps, and how much the dairy there contributes to the overall emissions

  • @mimikrya8794
    @mimikrya8794 Год назад +3

    Since according to the media, and DW is one of them, renewable projects have already been implemented in many countries, I am interested in how much CO2 emissions have been reduced so far compared to the previous situation? Whether the total CO2 emission has been reduced to any extent or not so far?

    • @ninaromm5491
      @ninaromm5491 Год назад

      @ mimi krya . Indeed ! Time for follow-up...

    • @Amaling
      @Amaling Год назад

      global CO2 is still rising. Some countries are improving, but it's not enough

    • @mimikrya8794
      @mimikrya8794 Год назад

      @@Amaling It's clear to me, but I would like to see the effectiveness of promoted "green" policies and measures discussed in the media without censorship. The measures taken so far are primarily obfuscation of reality and dumbing down of the people, with the aim of keeping politicians in power. In our country, they would say, "you want to cure cancer with chamomile".

    • @margaretarmstrong2445
      @margaretarmstrong2445 Год назад

      The overall global C02 emissions are continuing on the same trajectory. They continue to rise.
      Some of the biggest western nations have sent most of their major manufacturing to China, including renewables manufacturing. Partly in a bid to reduce emissions and meet targets but mostly because since they shut down their own coal-fired power plants to reduce their emissions, they can't afford the exorbitant cost of 'clean' electricity. So now these countries are reliant on China for the infrastructure that caused their economies to blow out of control. Nuts eh!
      China has so much business now that it's opening two coal-fired power plants each and every week. How else will it keep the infrastructure cheap and help with the global 'transition'. Gee I hope they don't decide they don't want to play anymore, what an easy way to screw the planet. Of course Australia always likes to be helpful, we purchase almost all of our renewables offshore and we blow up our own power plants.
      So to answer your question, C02 has not been reduced by any country in reality. It has been exported to China which is why their C02 emissions are around 30% of the anthropogenic contribution and rising.
      Isn't it lucky that anthropogenic C02 has never actually been proven to be the control knob of the temperature. Not by anyone. In fact C02 has been much higher in the long history of our planet and the temperatures were far lower at those times.

    • @mimikrya8794
      @mimikrya8794 Год назад

      @@margaretarmstrong2445 Only then there were not 8 billion people on Earth.

  • @techcafe0
    @techcafe0 Год назад +13

    Rupert Murdoch, speaking of villains

  • @justhuman3886
    @justhuman3886 Год назад +5

    Thank you DW

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Год назад

      Very welcome and thank you for watching 😊

  • @happycarnivore..
    @happycarnivore.. Год назад +1

    Nuclear is the only alternative power source for Australia. Renewables can supplement energy but can never provide a baseload.

  • @kestertroy
    @kestertroy Год назад +1

    Australia is one of the weirder countries that i) taxes EV car ownerships, ii) allowing public transportation to be 20yrs behind Korea/Japan, iii) allowing road tolls to be monopolized by one company, iv) promotes complacency and discourages innovation through heavy taxes (or the lack of tax incentives thereof).
    Everywhere you go in Australia you'd see complacency and this nation of complacency has largely been protected by signs telling you it's not okay to complain/get mad at/abuse institutions because of their ineptness.