BaliBuzz: Australia’s Climate Change Election

by Amanda McKenzie

Day 1 of the Bali conference was eventful, confusing, exciting, frustrating and a whole lot of other emotions rolled into one. While we all got lost finding where we were supposed to go for government delegation meetings, youth caucus meetings and plenaries, we all managed to eventually get ourselves into gear and learn a lot.

A major talking point of the day was Australia’s speech to the COP in which they announced that they will ratify the Kyoto Protocol, which was met with much applause.

Australia ’s recent Federal election has been widely reported around the globe, from Uganda to Tehran, from Brussels to New York, as the ‘Climate Change Election’.

This is definitely the perception here at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Bali where the result has breathed new life into the negotiations. When Australia announced in the opening Plenary that it would immediately ratify the Kyoto Protocol the room went wild – well as wild as diplomats, usually the constrained type, can be – there was cheering, whistling and a standing ovation. It has raised hopes around the world that Australia will move from laggard to leader.

As a country that is already suffering severe climate change impacts, with a Prime Minister that has a clear mandate from the people to take concerted immediate action to solve the climate crisis, Australia is well placed to drive international negotiations to build upon and strengthen the Kyoto Protocol.

However, ratification of the Protocol is merely a first step. Australia and the global community must go much further if we are to avert climate disaster. The urgency in which world leaders develop and implement a global solution must reflect the urgency of the problem.

We are currently experiencing the impacts of 0.7 degrees global warming. In the last few years we have seen many “worst ever” events - the worst drought in Australia in a 1000 years, in North Western America in 500 years and in the Amazon rainforest in a 100 years, the most damaging and costly hurricane of all time, hurricane Katrina, the worst ever forest fires in California, Australia, Greece, Portugal and Russia, the worst heat wave ever in Europe killing 35,000 people, and the worst flooding in living memory in South East Asia in 2006 and South Asia and Britain in 2007. Many people living on small islands must consider evacuation as their homes begin to be submerged by rising sea levels. This is the first time Eskimos have witnessed polar bears drown as they search farther and farther for food in the rapidly melting Artic.

Each day climate change has dangerous impacts right across the world. Each day we continue to pump more and more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. Each day developing and implementing a global solution to the climate crisis becomes more and more urgent.

The Bali Conference represents a unique opportunity for the Australian government to reinvent itself. Having set a positive tone at the beginning of the conference, Australia can use the momentum to push for a solution that will transform the global economy and prevent catastrophic climate change. To do otherwise would be to undermine the mandate bestowed upon the newly-elected government by the Australian people. I commend Prime Minister Rudd on his first act as Prime Minister, ratification, and look forward to witnessing strong, positive climate announcements when he arrives in Bali.

0 Responses to “BaliBuzz: Australia’s Climate Change Election”


  1. No Comments

About Ellen


Ellen is studying a Bachelor of Science/Bachelor of Arts at the University of Melbourne and is currently the Environment Officer in the Student Union. Through this position she has been involved in projects such as running "LEAP", an environmental conference for high school students, organising campaigns to switch her campus to Green Power and recycled paper, and facilitating the Melbourne University Environment Collective. she is an active member of the Australian Student Environment Network. She has been involved in many other youth groups over the past five years, including "Lead On", an organisation which builds links between business and regional/rural youth. Whilst involved with Lead On, Ellen ran "Thong on the Roof", a national youth film festival and was also editor of her local youth newspaper in Mildura.

Flickr Photos

IMG_1825.JPG

IMG_1818.JPG

IMG_1819.JPG

IMG_1811.JPG

More Photos
block.png