As business
leaders representing a cross-section
of the Australian economy, we believe
that climate change is a major business
risk and we need to act now.
There is broad consensus that climate
change is real, the potential impacts
are significant and we need to act to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions. However,
there is currently no agreement on how
best to respond, when this response should
begin and what it will cost.
Business is understandably
concerned about the impact this response
could have on Australia’s economy
and international competitiveness.
We believe there is a need to balance
this with the potential impacts of
climate change on Australia and the
economic costs of continuing policy
uncertainty.
Together with the
Australian Conservation Foundation,
we formed the Australian Business Roundtable
on Climate Change. The Roundtable commissioned
independent research from CSIRO to
quantify climate impacts on Australia.
This research confirms that Australia
is particularly vulnerable to climate
change. The economic impacts are significant
and widespread, affecting in particular
Australia’s
leading export earners, agriculture
and tourism. This will have flow-on
effects for the whole economy.
However, CSIRO has concluded that reducing
global greenhouse emissions will reduce
the rate and magnitude of climate change.
Even if we cannot avoid further warming,
we will have more time to adapt to a
harsher and more varied climate.
Given the incentive to act and to act
early, the Roundtable commissioned the
Allen Consulting Group to analyse what
it will cost Australia to substantially
reduce its greenhouse gas emissions,
as part of an international response,
and model the respective costs of early
and delayed action.
This research demonstrates that Australia
can deliver significant reductions at
an affordable cost. Furthermore, the
longer we delay action, the more expensive
it becomes for business and for the wider
Australian economy.
These findings have
near-term policy implications for Australia.
We support government calls for a collaborative
approach to climate change as demonstrated
by the Asia Pacific Partnership on
Clean Development and Climate and recent
Council of Australian Governments initiatives
(CoAG). However, we believe Australia
needs to do more.
We ask Australian
governments to work together, for example,
through CoAG to develop nationally
consistent climate change policies,
supported by all jurisdictions. This
approach will ensure that Australia
has an economically and environmentally
effective national response and provides
the necessary certainty for investors.
The Roundtable suggests that business
and governments work together to frame
policies on three fronts:
- Design a long, loud and
legal framework to establish
a price signal;
- Encourage innovation and
investment in emerging
and breakthrough technologies;
and
- Build national
resilience to the impacts
of climate change.
The Roundtable believes
the full package of recommendations
outlined in this report will create
the necessary investment conditions
to enable Australia to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions while maintaining strong
economic growth. We believe this response
is in the national interest and call
on governments to adopt the recommendations
now to allow business to respond effectively.
|
|