Rudd’s Carbon Cop Out

Karl FitzgeraldCommentary, True Cost Economics2 Comments

Still in shock at the ALP’s audacious handout to the nation’s biggest polluters, we thought it time to broach a few of the details hidden within the 824 page Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme (CPRS) White Paper.

Billions of dollars of the commons is proposed to be given away by the climate scheme. Permanent and inalienable carbon permits will be handed over to the biggest polluters if it passes both houses of parliament. These do not expire. Five year windows have been announced where ‘4 year vintages’ of the proceeding trading period permits are sold, presumably in tranches.

If the rapidly melting permafrost demands a drastic reduction in carbon permits, the taxpayer will have to compensate the polluters in buying those permits back. However, even then a case could be mounted in the courts to delay this.

Pricing Undermined

The CPRS relies on the pricing system to reduce outputs. However, the pricing system will be undermined by the ability to import carbon permits from international markets.

The international market will be flooded with permits, as world wide the development of carbon sinks has been growing but the purchasers are yet to come online. Australia will be one of the first carbon markets with a viable demand for carbon permits.

This will ensure that the carbon price will be low, threatening the viability of the system and risking the need for buybacks from polluters.
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Renegade Economists Podcast 67

Karl FitzgeraldCommentaryLeave a Comment

Creative Commons License photo credit: madaboutasia

Carbon Catchcry: this hour long special is our last formal show of the year, with an interview of Anna Rose (Australian Youth Climate Coalition) on Rudd’s filthy 5%. Also international guest Fred Foldvary discusses the insides to the GFC and what could be really done if politics was for people not cronies. How many policy papers will the Rudd govt slide thru this week? www.earthsharing.org.au.

Show Notes

Why economic growth fails us -> society’s progress is captured and reflected by higher land prices. The wealth gap expands when speculators dominate such an essential market as land and housing.

Rudd on climate fail
– top heavy capitalism
– slow to change due to lobbyocracy, Chomsky informs us of academic Thomas Ferguson and his ‘investment theory of politics’. Read Chomsky’s first interview since the Obama election.

Rudd’s Emissions Target: A Policy Analysis by Anna Rose.
Article highlights:

Thirty per cent of the permits from the scheme will be given away for free, and there will be direct cash handouts to some industries like coal-fired generators, who score a cool $3.9 billion — untied to any structural adjustment programs to transition out of this dirty fuel.

The more polluting you are, the more free permits you get. The biggest polluters get 90 per cent of their pollution permits for free, and the second biggest polluters get 60 per cent of their permits for free.

It’s worth noting that LNG companies like Woodside and Santos are huge winners from the scheme, as they had been excluded from receiving assistance in the Government’s Green paper in July. Now, they’ll receive 60 per cent of their permits for free, despite being well positioned to make windfall gains from emissions trading since LNG is a less polluting fuel than coal and oil.
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Compromise Kev on Climate Change

Karl FitzgeraldCommentaryLeave a Comment

Ice sculpture in the making
Creative Commons License photo credit: net_efekt

Yesterday’s long awaited emissions trading white paper has left the future of the planet compromised.

The compromises on the 5% cut to greenhouse emissions typifies a government torn between lobbyists feathering their nests and the public’s wrestling of the issues via the omnipresent public opinion polls.

The trade-offs have been so extensive that no one is happy. The future of our dry continent has been jeopardised by weak leadership. The well funded smokestack industries are upset at the $8bn in extra costs they will face. Environmental groups are concerned that the cuts are so low.

Looking further into the detail, the handouts to the polluters in the form of free carbon permits threaten to undermine the whole process. Even more so, the $11.5bn in revenue raised will be handed back out to households ($6bn) and motorists ($2bn) such that only $3.5bn is raised. We might as well say that the ETS will only be set at 1% when taking into account these handouts.

Aluminium smelters whose electricity bills will rise with ET will be given that money back, in spades, receiving permits for one tonne of free emissions for every 0.7 tonnes included in their electricity bill. Come to Australia, polluters’ paradise!

says Tim Colebatch (The Age). All this and more when Alcoa already receives massive handouts from the Victorian taxpayer in the form of low resource rents on the dirty coal being extracted from their Anglesea mine.

A carbon tax, backed up with a system of Resource Rentals is a much more direct way to deal with this vital vital issue. Survival of humankind demands we look outside the square. Politics is only going to get more radical.

Bribathon Brumby’s recent free lunch handout to Victoria’s property lobby has ensured the urban sprawl forever mantra continues. It seems that those genuinely concerned about our future should form a lobby group and start donating to the political parties. It may well be the only way to get politicians to listen.

2008 I Want to Live Here report release

Karl FitzgeraldCampaigns, Commentary6 Comments

Media Release

Housing Shortage in Inner City a Myth

2,317 properties have been found empty in central Melbourne during Australia’s worst ever housing crisis.


Read the Full Report
(PDF 432kb)

“The 2008 I Want to Live Here report has found a 7% genuine vacancy rate in the inner city as compared to the much publicised 0.9% vacancy rate. The reported rate is a shocking one tenth of the genuine vacancy rate that speculators withhold from the market” said report author Tohm Curtis.

“At least $1 billion in vacant property exists in the inner city, and over $10 billion in Greater Melbourne.”

“The suburb of Carlton alone has sufficient vacancies to house all 220 reported homeless students at Melbourne Uni” said Mr Curtis.

“Last week the Housing Industry Association tried to claim that land supply is the cause of rising housing prices. Yet the 90,000 blocks opened up by Brumby earlier this year, on top of the 38,000 existing empty blocks of land held by Australia’s 6 biggest developers, have done nothing to curb rising land prices. Obviously there is another factor at play and our report demonstrates that it is speculation.” stated Project Coordinator Karl Fitzgerald.

“Brumby’s 2030 expansion is nothing more than a handout to property speculators. What he should focus on is tax reform to ensure that existing housing is used for living rather than the ‘laughing all the way to the bank mentality’ that land speculation enables.”

“Council budgets are stressed by further infrastructure expansions when existing residentially zoned land should be further utilised.”

“The least we should be doing to tackle climate change is to ensure that people are living as close to their places of employment as possible. It makes no sense for packed suburban trains and busy roads to be driving past vacant property after vacant property when there is space for people to live close enough to walk and cycle to work and school.” said Mr Fitzgerald.

“These speculative vacancies are unacknowledged by economists and politicians despite being reported in the Census as recently as 2006. Government should rely on its own reliable sources of information instead of using figures provided by the real estate industry. The REIV and Australian Property Monitors regularly report vacancies of 0.7-0.9%, based on those properties up for rent.” claimed Mr Curtis.

“These speculative vacancies exist because government policy reinforces this speculative behaviour. Policy at all levels of government have been designed to keep the housing bubble inflated” said Mr Curtis.

The I Want To Live Here report calls for genuine tax reform as the only means to ensure long term housing affordability and ensure future Boom Bust cycles are avoided. Higher and flatter holding taxes on land should be implemented to balance out the advantage that property speculation has over all other forms of business.

Key Findings:

* 2,317 vacant properties in inner Melbourne.
* 18,070 vacant properties in CityWest Water’s client base of Greater Melbourne.
* $1,044,967,000 worth of vacant property in the inner city.
* If 44 of the 2,317 vacant properties were leased or sold per week it would take over a year to clear the backlog.
* If this extra supply of housing was to hit the market the price of housing would become more affordable.
* Government policies of all levels are critiqued and fall short on many levels.


Read the Full Report
(PDF 432kb)

Appendix 1 – CWW vacancy findings

Read the 2007 report

For questions or comments please contact:
Tohm Curtis, Researcher, Report Author, 0416 313 273, tohm@earthsharing.org.au
Karl Fitzgerald, Project Coordinator, (03) 9670 2754, k2@earthsharing.org.au

Bailing Out the Wealth Gap

Karl FitzgeraldArticles1 Comment

Creative Commons License photo credit: kimberlyfaye

Karl Fitzgerald

Around the world, pubs and bars are full of insightful conversations, democracy at work grass roots style, as we try to make sense of the global financial meltdown. 19/10/08

“From neo-liberalism to neo-handouts, the pyramid purveyors know how to baffle the masses” scowled Maxxy. With the financial meltdown moving at a rate of knots, policy makers and armchair critics alike are scrambling to keep up with the plans of the vested interests.

Some estimate that $45 trillion has already been wiped from the global economy.

“The world of monopoly capitalism has quickly reverted back to ‘privatise the profits, socialise the losses” said Maxxy to his ole sparring partner Ruth.

Their Sunday arvo beer garden sessions looked into the eyes of the philosophical times we live in. “How can governments worldwide fall for it?” said Ruth. “To think that the banks deserve cheap money spoon fed from central banks is just unworldly. The handouts for AIG palatial parties are just the beginning. The old hands from Goldman Sachs have been given the reigns to handout the money”

“What? Are Goldman Sachs working for the government now?” exclaimed Maxxy.

“No – but the revolving door between Goldman and Treasury didn’t stop with ‘Paulson the panicker’. He bought over three of his minions. They are the ones on the sub committee deciding who gets what from the $800bn bailout.” professed Ruth.

“Och that bankers bailout – bailing out the wealth gap! Shock Doctrine in effect. How many trillion have been pumped on those printing presses Ruth? I hope they’re using recycled paper on all these new dollar notes!” joked Maxxy.

“Well you know my story on that one. ‘If you owned all the money in the world and I owned all the land, how much do you think I’d charge you for your first night’s rent?’” asked Ruth.
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