Australia joins G7-backed ‘climate club’ and promises to drive down greenhouse gas emissions

Australia is becoming a member of the "climate club" backed by the Group of Seven main economies to take extra formidable motion in tackling international warming, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has introduced.

The membership was first proposed by Nobel Prize winner William Nordhaus as a means of getting international locations to voluntarily set excessive targets for curbing local weather change after which require buying and selling companions to fulfill those self same requirements.

Such strikes are opposed by main rising economies like China, the world's greatest emitter of greenhouse fuel.

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"We're very pleased to join the climate club because we are ambitious and we also see that this isn't just the right thing to do by the environment, but this is also the right thing to do by jobs and by our economy," Albanese stated at a news convention in Berlin after assembly German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who made the concept a key pillar of his G7 presidency final 12 months.

"One thing we can do is to cooperate and learn off each other, because you can't address climate change as just a national issue. It has to be by definition, a global response," Albanese stated.

The Albanese authorities dedicated final 12 months to chop greenhouse fuel emissions by 43 per cent by the tip of the last decade — nearly double the earlier goal.

In March, parliament handed a legislation requiring Australia's greatest greenhouse fuel polluters scale back their emissions or pay for carbon credit.

Other international locations which have joined the local weather membership embody Argentina, Chile, Denmark, Indonesia, Colombia, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Singapore and Uruguay.

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Source: www.9news.com.au