Plans by the federal government for Australia to generate more than four-fifths of its power from renewable sources by 2030 are coming under pressure amid claims the country is way off track.
Key points:
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There are increasing suggestions Australia will fall short of its 2030 renewable power target of 82 per cent
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Analysts predict Australia’s share of renewable energy is on track to be about 60 per cent at the current rate of progress
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The forecasts come amid mounting opposition to projects such as transmission lines in some parts of Australia
The ABC has a mandate to deliver “accurate, impartial, and independent news”. It’s a government agency and failing deliver that would likely result in serious consequences for anyone who decided not to publish this content.
Articles like this one are a critical component of the way democracy works in this country. Keeping people informed of progress on mitigating climate change is absolutely critical.
That gets a bit more tricky. Nexa is a research organisation that does research into whatever someone pays them to research. They’re not unbiased - I don’t think they’ve said who funded them for this paper?
Um. No. Obviously not. But they’re a big one.
Again, obviously, there are more.
… yes?
I think the world doesn’t have the capacity to produce batteries in the quantities required even if nobody every uses one in a home, so, no. If anything batteries at home should be heavily discouraged. We need those batteries for electric vehicles, not houses.
Nowhere near quickly enough.