🌏 What Happens When Climate Is No Longer a Priority?

What Happens When Climate Is No Longer a Priority?

What the Liberal Retreat Really Says

This week, the Liberal Party of Australia made its position clear: climate action is no longer a priority. By abandoning the net zero target, they’ve signalled to every supporter, and to the world, that the planet doesn’t matter enough to protect. But climate collapse doesn’t wait for consensus. It doesn’t respect borders. And it won’t be solved by delay.

The decision to formally abandon the 2050 net zero commitment marks a dangerous shift away from urgency, away from accountability and away from solidarity with the global movement. The justification? Australia contributes “only” about 1% of global emissions. But this argument collapses under scrutiny.

🔹 Australia’s per capita emissions are among the highest in the world 

🔹 Its fossil fuel exports make it the second-largest climate polluter globally, behind only Russia 

🔹 80% of Australia’s fossil carbon emissions come from exports, not domestic use

To abandon net zero is not just a policy change, it’s a moral failure. It tells young Australians, First Nations communities, farmers, other animals, and coastal towns that their future is negotiable. And yet, this moment reveals something deeper: a political class more committed to short-term power than long-term planetary care. The public deserves better. And the planet demands better.

 

🌱 Animal Agriculture: The Unspoken Driver

While fossil fuels dominate headlines, animal agriculture contributes at least 16.5% of global greenhouse gas emissions.  Livestock farming emits methane, nitrous oxide, and carbon dioxide, potent climate-warming gases.  It also drives deforestation, biodiversity loss, water pollution, and ocean acidification, as agricultural runoff and atmospheric CO₂ disrupt marine ecosystems and threaten coral reefs.

Despite this, animal agriculture remains largely absent from mainstream climate policy.  Why? Because dietary change is personal, and politically inconvenient. 

But it’s also powerful.

According to Project Drawdown, shifting to plant-based diets is one of the most effective household climate actions available.  It’s not about perfection. It’s about progress.

 

🌀 So what now?

We act. We organize. We educate. We vote. We divest. We protest. We plant. We build.  Because when leadership fails, people must lead. This isn’t just about emissions. It’s about ethics.  About refusing to let political cowardice dictate ecological collapse.  About standing with the planet, even when our government won’t. Australia can be more than a footnote in climate history.  It can be a force for justice, innovation, and renewal.  But only if we, the people, refuse to be silenced.

🌿 Climate justice isn’t a policy. It’s a promise. And it starts with us.

Sources: 

UNSW – Australia among top climate polluters 

Climate Analytics – Australia’s fossil fuel footprint 

Sentient Media – Animal agriculture and climate 

NOAA – Ocean acidification overview 

ScienceDirect – Agricultural runoff and marine ecosystems 

Project Drawdown – Plant-rich diets

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