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  1. #226
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Looper, you have a wonderful Minister for Climate Change and Energy now. You must be so proud of Mr. Bowen.


    • 'We are paying the price of nine years of policy dysfunction' says Chris Bowen


    Energy ministers from around the country have held talks to discuss the soaring price of gas. Leigh Sales interviews Chris Bowen, the new federal minister for energy and climate change.



    _____________

    Australia renewables




    Demand for batteries linked to rooftop solar panels has soared in the past month amid energy price rices and the coldest start to winter in decades.

    According to Solar Victoria chief executive, Stan Krpan, inquiries into battery rebates in Victoria have spiked in the past two weeks.

    The Andrews government, which expanded its solar rebate scheme in the March budget, offers up to $3,500 for households to install a solar battery, as well as rebates for solar panels and solar hot water systems.

    The Clean Energy Council, the industry group representing Australia’s renewables industry, also said solar retailers were reporting a boom in sales enquiries.

    About 30% of Australian homes have rooftop solar, the highest rate in the world.

    Battery systems provide power for use at night, on cloudy days or, in some cases, in blackouts.

    Krpan said there had been 5,842 battery rebate applications approved this financial year, with three weeks left to go – more than double the number received last year.

    “In the past two weeks, phone inquiries to our contact centre have been 50% higher than the yearly average,” Krpan said.

    “We’re expecting this to lead to growth in installations over the winter months.”

    Kane Thornton, chief executive of the Clean Energy Council, said solar retailers under the council’s accreditation scheme were reporting significant increases in enquiries, “with consumers looking to take control of their energy bills through rooftop solar and batteries.”

    “Recent media stories around the rising cost of electricity and now the threat of interruptions to power supply seem to be a driver of this increase in interest in the feedback we’ve received,” he said.

    More than three million Australian households and small businesses now had solar systems installed, according to Thornton, “and we’re expecting 2022 to be another strong year for small-scale solar and storage.”

    Other states and territories offering similar battery schemes including South Australia and the ACT said their strong investment in renewables had softened the blow of the energy price hike.

    The ACT was the first state or territory to introduce a battery rebate incentive scheme in 2016, offering households a rebate of $3,500 or 50% of the cost to install a solar battery.

    As of 1 June, 2,990 battery install rebates have been issued.

    An ACT government spokesperson said there’d been a renewed rise in applications since a zero interest loan scheme was introduced alongside the existing scheme in August last year.

    Under the scheme, households can borrow between $2,000 and $15,000 to invest in energy efficient products including rooftop solar, battery and hot water heat pumps.

    “Solar and battery storage can save an average householder 60-80% on their electricity bills,” the spokesperson said.

    Since South Australia’s home battery scheme began in late 2018, 19,830 households have been conditionally approved for the subsidy, while 18,517 batteries have been installed.

    Households who have taken up the scheme reported annual electricity bill reductions between $300 and $2,000.

    A spokesperson for the department of energy and mining said inquiries into the SA scheme had increased in the past month, but that could be because it announced last month that the applications would close on 1 September, or earlier if grant money ran out.
    Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

  2. #227
    Thailand Expat
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    The Teals will force the Greens to get smart at last

    John Menadue asks whether the Greens can avoid the perfect obstructing the good. The Teals will force the Greens to Get Smart.

    The Greenslide across inner Brisbane last month stands in stark contrast to the electoral performance of the Greens in Melbourne and Sydney and has more in common with the Teals. Understanding how this happened is critical for productively imagining a multiparty future for Australian politics.

    The Greens took both ALP and LNP seats using the community consultation approach adopted by Adam Bandt in 2010 and introduced into Brisbane two years later. It happens to be very similar to the approach used in Indi and now promulgated by the Voices for …, the Community Independents Group and Climate 200. It derives from the work of Saul Alinsky in Chicago and was mainstreamed by Barack Obama. (The details of that process has already been examined in these pages and is primarily of interest to policy wonks.)

    Capitalists for Climate Change

    The similarities of the outcomes in Greensland and the southern Teal electorates masks the major barrier to Green electoral and political success alluded to last week by Founder Menadue. The anti-capitalist (anti-everything) stance of the Greens has alienated them from the electorate. By the simple soft show shuffle of saying, “I’m a capitalist and I want to avoid climate change,” the Teals have won the hearts of the old money suburbs of Melbourne and Sydney, leaving the hipsters of the inner city to argue whether the left wing of the ALP, the Greens or some other progressive group should get their vote.

    The Greens have indeed pursued the perfect at the expense of the good. This is not an accident, as the tech industry would have it, it is a design feature not a bug. Our consensus approach to policy making has allowed every member with an agenda a voice at the table. Founder Menadue is right. This is political poison. I know this from personal experience in the NSW and the Queensland Greens as well as lived experience walking outer suburbs and regional centres.

    For my many and various sins I was condemned to three years of market research, knocking on 100 doors a weekend across Queensland to survive a fall from the boardroom to the poverty line. I had heard tens of thousand times of voters telling me “I’m an environmentalist, but I’m not a Green,” as I handed out how to vote cards, accosted innocent shoppers, or parents picking up children as a Greens candidate. I had heard it, but I did not understand the depth of the disdain behind those words until I sat down with homebodies, tradies and middle managers across the socio-economic spectrum to find out how they survived and what helped them make it through the day.

    The thing they hated most about the Greens is that we are out of touch. We don’t like guns, we care more about the feelings of mice than the survival of farmers, individual’s gender anxiety than suburban existential angst about the world falling apart around our ears. We would close down abattoirs/coal fired power stations/forestry/fast fashion as our first priority and then worry about how to feed and clothe people. I could go on for thousands of words about the failures of the Greens to connect to “ordinary” people. But the point of this article is to identify how that failure contrasts with what the Teals have done and, more importantly, how the Queensland Greens have bridged the gap between ideology and practice.

    Both groups used community campaigning techniques to identify what the community wanted, to normalise political discourse and, so, to build trust in the candidate with the individual voter. That is an extraordinarily healthy development in Australian politics, and it will help end the cancer of the two party political system.

    The Teals built a community campaign that focused on the alarming corruption of Australian politics, specifically as it related to gender, climate and integrity. The simplification capitalists for climate change is partly to distinguish them from the Queensland Greens and partly to acknowledge the damage caused by the ideological cleansing of the Liberals.

    Hollowing out the Liberals

    The ideological hollowing out of the Liberal party was initiated by John Howard, realised by Tony Abbott, and exploited by Scotty from marketing. My interview with Guy Pearse on the release of his book, High and Dry in 2008, analyses in detail that way that Howard isolated the climate activists and the left in the Liberal Party between 1995 and 2001 when the attack on the world trade centre gave him cover for the Tampa incident and Australia began its lurch to the right. The Greenslanders, on the other hand, took a leaf from Hume’s Philosophy in Action, and discussed modern dilemmas with voters, framing the discussion about voter concerns in relation to Greens values, without preaching.

    What is really important about the commonality is that we have subjected ideological fanaticism to empathy and common sense, which is the basis of good governance.

    What is really important about that distinction is that the Greenslanders have maintained and promoted 21st Century values that resonate across the political spectrum, age and socio-economic factors.

    The Teals have yet to work out how they will operate in the party political framework of parliament. The Greens have three decades of experience building a political party and have now learned how to connect to voters.

    Geoff Ebbs is the author of Your Life Your Planet, the Australian Internet Book and four times a federal candidate for The Greens in NSW and Qld and past member of the party executive.

    The Teals will force the Greens to get smart at last - Pearls and Irritations

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