Australia Can Lead the Production & Utilization of Green Hydrogen, Former Prime Minister Turnbull Says
Former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull recently said that Australia has the potential to be a world leader in the … [continued]
Former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull recently said that Australia has the potential to be a world leader in the … [continued]
Malcolm Turnbull was expelled as prime minister of Australia last week as members of his own party pilloried him for his support of renewable energy. He had a few things to say on his way out the door.
UK-based billionaire Sanjeev Gupta is looking to buy equipment from and use part of the old Holden factory in South Australia to create an electric vehicle production line. That would be a significant part of remarkable transformation of Australia’s car industry and economy.
New research from Bloomberg New Energy Finance has confirmed the obvious need for national political ambition for a growing and robust renewable energy industry, but the current Turnbull Government is threatening Australia’s booming clean energy deployment.
Australian comedian stalwart Tom Gleeson took to the stage earlier this month at the 2017 Opening Night Comedy Allstars Supershow, the highlight of the annual Melbourne Comedy Festival, and promptly skewered Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s renewable energy policy, Australia’s “ridiculous” electricity business model, and threw in a stab at taxi drivers just for the fun of it.
Despite underhanded and erroneous attempts by certain parts of the Australian government, not to mention efforts by the country’s coal and gas industries, public support for renewable energy remains high, according to new polling published this week.
The head of Australia’s Clean Energy Council, Kane Thornton, has highlighted the need for the country’s politicians to focus on transitioning to a low-carbon, renewable energy future at the lowest possible cost, and building policies which will support the phase-out of coal and the growth of investment in renewable energy generation.
There is little that Trump and his regime is doing on climate and clean energy that has not already achieved, or attempted, by the current Coalition government in Canberra.
This Saturday, Australians will go to the polls in the country’s federal election, and there are some who are saying … [continued]
Originally published on RenewEconomy. Climate change, prime minister Malcom Turnbull once said, is the ultimate long-term problem that needs to … [continued]