Australia
will force its 500 worst polluters to pay 23 Australian dollars ($25) for every
ton of carbon dioxide they emit, with the government promising to compensate
households hit with higher power bills under a plan to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions unveiled Sunday.
Prime
Minister Julia Gillard sought to reassure wary Australians that the deeply
unpopular carbon tax will only cause a minority of households to pay more and
insisted it is critical to helping the country lower its massive carbon
emissions. Australia is one of the world's worst greenhouse gas polluters, due
to its heavy reliance on coal for electricity.
"We
generate more carbon pollution per head than any other country in the developed
world," Gillard told reporters in Canberra as she released details of the
tax, which will go into effect on July 1, 2012. "We've got a lot of work
to do to hold our place in the race that the world is running."
The government
hopes businesses affected by the tax will seek out clean energy alternatives to
reduce their bills. The affected companies will have to pay AU$23 per metric
ton of carbon, with the price rising 2.5 percent a year until 2015, when the
plan will move to a market-based emissions trading scheme.
The carbon
tax is the government's main tool in meeting its pledge to reduce Australia's
greenhose gas emissions by the year 2020 to at least 5 percent below 2000
levels. By then, the tax will have helped reduce carbon pollution by 160
million metric tons - the equivalent of taking 45 million cars off the road,
Gillard said.
Critics of
the plan say Australian households will be unfairly burdened by hgher costs
passed onto them by the big polluters. To help compensate for the higher bills,
nine out of 10 households will receive some kind of assistance in the form of
income tx cuts and payments. Two-thirds of all households will receive enough
assistance to cover the entire financial impact of the tax, Gillard said.
Under the
plan, the average household will see its costs increase by AU$9.90 a week,
which includes an additional AU$3.30 per week for electricity and another
AU$.50 a week for gas. But the government says on average, households will
receive AU$10.10 a week in assistance.
Industries
affected by the change will get AU$9.2 billion in compensation over the next
three years, with the worst-hit businesses expected to be steel and aluminum
manufacturers.
Conservative
opposition leader Tony Abbott, an outspoken critic of the plan, insisted it
will drive up the cost of living for millions of Australians and will do
nothing to help the environment.
"It's
socialism masquerading as environmentalism," Abbott told reporters.
"It's a package which is all economic pain for n environmental gain."
The
Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry said the tax would weaken the
economy and do little to help the environment.
"Economically,
the tax is a harsh blow to import and export competing businesses, especially
small and medium businesses," the group's CEO Peter Anderso said in a
statement. "Our international competitors get a free kick, of our own
making."
Mitch
Hooke, CEO of the Minerals Council of Australia, also slammed the plan, saying
it will cost the minerals industry AU$25 billion ($26.8 billion) between 2012
and 2020.
Hooke said
the government and Greens prty were "imposing costs that none of our
international competitors face, and cannot be justified in transitioning the
Australian industry to a low carbon future."
"It
will simply export investment, jobs, global market share and emissions
offshore," Hooke said.
Environmental
groups were cautiouslyoptimistic about the scheme.
"This
package is not perfect, but it is absolutely essential Australia gets
started," Australian Conservation Foundation executive director Don Henry
said in a statement.
Greenpeace
said the package was a good start, but believes the price per ton of carbon
should be higher.
"The
fact that we have any price at all is testament to all Australians who demanded
the government take action on climate change," Greenpeace Australia
Pacific CEO Linda Selvey said in a statement. "But equally, the fact it is
such a low price, with such limited coverage is testament to the power of the
big polluters to dominate Australia's political leadership."
Scientists
say carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases emitted by industry,
transportation and agriculture are driving global temperatures higher.
Without
dramatic reductions in emissions, scientists have warned that melting polar ice
caps will inundate islands and coastal areas, certain plant and animal species
risk extinction and extreme weather conditions will increase.
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