“The Minerals Council has been on the fringe of the climate and energy debate in Australia, opposing policies that would tackle emissions effectively,” Executive Director of The Australia Institute, Ben Oquist said.
“It
defies commons sense that the CSIRO, an organisation that researches climate
change and develops renewable technology, gives money to a lobby group that
campaigns against effective climate policy and against policies that would
increase renewable energy.
“One of
MCA’s main functions is to lobby to change government policy. In its 2013
annual report the MCA boasts it ‘was at the forefront of the debates over
the carbon and mining taxes; and their abolition (expected after July 2014)
will be in no small part due to the council’s determined advocacy on both
issues.’
“The MCA
lobbies against renewable energy policy, such as the Renewable Energy Target
and more recently the Clean Energy Target as recommended by Chief Scientist,
Alan Finkel.
“The
Minerals Council has also been involved in recent attempts to hobble the
advocacy role of charities and environment groups. “
“It is
not appropriate for the CSIRO to continue to be a member of this increasingly
extremist organisation,” Oquist said.
“While
the Commonwealth’s key scientific research organization effectively funds
political advocacy for the coal industry, it works to prohibit its own staff
from commenting on
national science policy.
“While
funding lobbying against the Chief Scientist’s recommendations, leaked emails
show internal unrest at CSIRO about the national science agency ‘missing in action’ on providing advice on climate
change.
“CSIRO
should have been the first member to leave the MCA due to climate concerns, but
that honour went to AGL last year.
“AGL quit
the MCA citing its position on climate change and renewable energy. CSIRO
should follow suit,” Oquist said.
In 2016 AGL left MCA stating: ‘AGL’s positions on
climate change and renewable energy differed from those held by the Minerals
Council of Australia and the Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration
Association, and AGL has elected not to renew its membership of these
organisations.’
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