Home EsporteAustralia politics live: activists paint ‘Tax Me’ on Newcastle coal ship; Burke introduces nature laws bill | Australia news

Australia politics live: activists paint ‘Tax Me’ on Newcastle coal ship; Burke introduces nature laws bill | Australia news

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Environmental group paints ‘Tax Me’ on coal ship in Newcastle named Climate Justice

Nick Visser

Nick Visser

The environmental group Rising Tide painted a large message on the side of a coal ship in Newcastle, NSW this morning: “TAX ME”.

Rising Tide said the chalk-based missive is meant to be a call on the federal government to introduce a 78% fossil fuel export profits tax, with the funds generated used to back the community and industrial transition away from fuels such as coal.

The coal ship targeted by the group is named Climate Justice. Alexa Stuart, a spokesperson for Rising Tide, said in a statement:

It is laughable that a coal ship is called “Climate Justice” …

Real climate justice is about heeding the dire scientific warnings, and committing to an urgent and just transition for coal workers and communities. We’re demanding a 78% tax on coal export profits to do exactly that.

This morning in Muloobinba / Newcastle, members of Rising Tide painted “TAX ME” on a coal ship named Climate Justice.
This morning in Muloobinba/Newcastle, members of Rising Tide painted ‘TAX ME’ on a coal ship named Climate Justice. Photograph: Rising Tide

Despite major profits, coal companies regularly pay low rates of tax.

Crossbench MPs also recently revived calls for a mining rent tax amid the country’s potential critical minerals boom. Independent MP David Pocock recently said Australia’s natural resources belong “to all of us, and if they’re going to be exploited, then we need to get a fair cut of that”.

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Dan Jervis-Bardy

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Conservationist groups speak out against ‘half arsed’ federal nature laws

Conservationist groups fear the federal government’s nature laws contain too many loopholes to properly protect the environment, with one warning there is “no point doing this half-arsed”.

The heads of Greenpeace, the Australian Conservation Foundation (ACF) and World Wildlife Fund (WWF) held a press conference in parliament house before laws to re-write the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act were introduced on Thursday morning.

The green groups are concerned the legislation does not address exemptions for native forest logging and agriculture and won’t create new requirements for the minister to consider climate change when assessing projects.

The acting chair of the ACF, Paul Sinclair, said:

These laws need to be strengthened to end deforestation. As they stand, these laws have too many loopholes. They risk more bush being put under the bulldozer. This is the biggest test the Albanese government has faced. We call on the Prime Minister to pass that test, to work with the parliament to strengthen these laws and end deforestation.”

The chief executive of Greenpeace, David Ritter, said:

There is no point doing this half-arsed. The protection of our national environment requires that the loopholes that enable the bulldozers and the chainsaws to destroy our forests are closed, and requires climate considerations to be embedded.”

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