The current housing pain might feel like an acute moment, but it is really the culmination of decades of policy in which every factor has pulled in the direction of making housing unaffordable.
Another interesting fact is that coal and natural gas production makes up about a third of all the money coming into the Australian economy, yet it wants to claim being “net zero” by 2050. I say no way José!
Ahh that makes a bit more sense, but still even using those figures, coal is 15% of exports and gas 7.7%. Less than a quarter combined, nowhere near a third.
We absolutely need to wean our economy off coal. I believe we can do it well before 2050.
There won’t be anyone to sell those resources to well before 2050, so we have no choice but to transition. Thankfully, we have an absurd amount of renewable resources and iron ore and rare earth minerals will still be needed. And we can do a lot of “value added” type work by not just exporting raw materials but at least building part of the final products.
Another interesting fact is that coal and natural gas production makes up about a third of all the money coming into the Australian economy, yet it wants to claim being “net zero” by 2050. I say no way José!
Given that mining (all mining) has always made up less than 10% of Australia’s GDP, how are you coming up with that ‘about a third’ figure?
He’s talking about exports
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_exports_of_Australia
Ahh that makes a bit more sense, but still even using those figures, coal is 15% of exports and gas 7.7%. Less than a quarter combined, nowhere near a third.
We absolutely need to wean our economy off coal. I believe we can do it well before 2050.
There won’t be anyone to sell those resources to well before 2050, so we have no choice but to transition. Thankfully, we have an absurd amount of renewable resources and iron ore and rare earth minerals will still be needed. And we can do a lot of “value added” type work by not just exporting raw materials but at least building part of the final products.