Let’s write hundreds of letters to the Environment Minister
Can you write a letter to Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek? Better yet, could you find a small group of other people of faith who might write letters with you?
We’re asking people of faith to write to her from all over the country to ask her for one simple thing: to put protecting the climate at the heart of our main piece of environmental legislation.
The amazing truth is that the single most pressing threat to our natural environment - climate change - is not included as a key consideration in Australia’s main environmental law, the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act.
Already Australia is the world’s third largest exporter of fossil fuels and the largest exporter of Liquified Natural Gas. While on the one hand Federal Labor is doing well to quickly scale up the use of renewable energy, on the other they are pouring new fuel on the climate fire.
Right now, this crucial environmental legislation is being reviewed and it is expected that details of the proposed reforms will be handed down by the Minister in early December, with a view to presenting new legislation to the Parliament in about March 2024.
Now is the best single chance to influence the reforms to this pivotal law. Let’s make sure the Environment Minister hears from people of faith everywhere.
What to include in your letter
ARRCC is reliably informed that an old-fashioned hand-written letter, sent through Australia Post, is given quite a bit more weight by MPs than they give an email. It shows the sender takes it more seriously.
Please write to Minister Tanya Plibersek in your own words and identify yourself as a person of faith. The views of people in faith communities are seen slightly differently by politicians.
We need as many letters as possible to reach the Minister by early December when she announces her proposed changes to the Act.
Our main ‘asks’ are that Minister Plibersek should:
- Put a pause on all approvals of new coal and gas projects until the review of the EPBC Act is completed as promised.
- Put climate impacts at the heart of the Act by making addressing this issue one of its Objects.
- Ensure that the full climate impacts of projects are included as factors to be considered in the assessment of projects.
- Expedite the review and/or allow public scrutiny of details of its progress.
In the context of a destructive fire season having already started, the main message for the Government needs to be to stop pouring fuel on the fire.
You may also want to send a Christmas card along with your letter wishing the Minister well.
Please send letters to:
Minister Plibersek
PO Box 6022
House of Representatives
Parliament House
Canberra ACT 2600
You could also write to your own MP and ask them to advocate with Government Ministers that the impacts of projects on the climate should be a key factor determining approval or rejection.
There's also a general guide to writing to an MP which will also be helpful in writing to Minister Plibersek.
Let’s make this big
We are going to keep a running total and keep you updated over the coming weeks. We’d really like a big response on this one. Let’s get letters to the Minister from all over the country. A couple of years ago we had a campaign of handwritten letters to Scott Morrison and more than 600 people wrote. Let’s do that again!
Would you mind letting us know via [email protected] if you have sent a letter, so we can keep a track of how many letters ARRCC supporters have sent? That way we can keep you and other people up-to-date with the number of letters being sent in.
Doing it with others
The best thing would be not only to write a letter yourself, but to get together with a few others from your place of worship and write one each. Why not ask a few people to stay around after worship? You could provide pens and paper and some of the main points from this web page to get people going.
If you do this, please send them as separate letters rather than in one envelope, as this gives a stronger impression.
Why does this matter?
A staggering 45% of all new proposed coal projects in the world are in Australia. Yet 95% of Australia’s coal must remain in the ground to even have a 50% chance of keeping to a 1.5C of warming.
Australia’s exports of Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) have risen dramatically in the last five years and, with our small population, Australia is now the third largest exporter of fossil fuels globally, behind Saudi Arabia and Russia.
The latest IEA report Executive Summary reiterates “No new long-lead time upstream oil and gas projects are needed in the NZE Scenario, neither are new coal mines, mine extensions or new unabated coal plants.” This is a rather dry way of saying that staying below 1.5 degrees of warming is incompatible with new coal, oil and gas projects.
More background
The Climate Council is calling for a pause on coal and gas project approvals, mainly as a way to put pressure on the Government to speed up the process of reviewing the EPBC Act. A moratorium or a ban won't be seen as acceptable, but a "pause" might be. The Climate Council is advocating that the process be sped up, and that the time of publishing the proposed reforms be brought forward so they are open to public scrutiny.
The Climate Council advocates that holding global warming to 1.5 degrees C should be one of the Objects of the Act, that climate should be embedded in the Act, and that potential climate impacts of a project, wherever the coal or gas ends up being burnt - whether here in Australia or overseas - should be at the heart of the approval process.
It is not transparent what changes to the Act are being considered. The indications are that the Government is not working on integrating climate into the revised EPBC Act.
The Minister’s proposed ‘Nature Positive Plan’ is publicly known but many questions remain unanswered:
It’s best not to use the term, “climate trigger” because:
- Labor sees it as a Greens proposal
- “Climate Trigger” means different things to different groups.
- At the moment, The Environment Minister interprets the “climate trigger” to mean that a project, once it’s approved, should be referred to Minister Bowen as a candidate for restrictions on their Scope 1 emissions
It is believed that Minister Plibersek's advisers are shielding her from the strength of people's concern about climate change. Now is an important time to be letting the Minister know your concern.
Please see the Climate Council's talking points for more information.