There's nothing wrong with what you have said, however it begs the question: is it worth the risk to our way of life?
I'd say 'yes', actually.
Whether you like it or not when we decide to accept this scheme under either a Labour or Liberal government then it will
always have a risk to our way of life. Mitigating against the effects of climate change is going to require societal change which no one is going to like, but it's going to happen so whether we do it like mature people or kicking and screaming are the choices.
Anyone who thinks we can manage climate change without risk to society is kidding themselves. There are going to be significant societal and cultural shifts required; the realisation of that should already flag the significant risk which will need to be accepted.
I'm sure all politicians from both sides and the general population would like to help mitigate climate change.
I'm not so sure about both sides of politics, let alone the general population for that matter.
In any case, the general fallacious argument comes back to, "Sure, I'll do something as long as it doesn't affect me." Well, it's not going to work like that.
But at what point do we say the cost to society too great? Companies moving off shore (like the MRRT for miners), Australians out of pocket by $900 per year, lost jobs (sounding like the Labor machine there ha!).
And herein lies another common problem.
No one is prepared to analyse further than that situation. Everyone thinks that tax comes in, people lose jobs, cost of living goes up, and that is that. Therefore it is bad, don't do it.
What happened to actually thinking about ways to mitigate against those proposed 'negative' changes? So we can still have the tax, achieve its goals and not have everyone needing to foot a fabled $900 increase? No one thought we could do that, or have the capacity to try and think about how we could do / achieve that? It's a case of "install tax - everyone pays $900 extra, period, that's it, no way around it"? Although I don't have the answer right now (so don't come sending shooters to nail me just because I can't do it), I'd like to think there is a "lemonade from lemons" answer here.
I'll vouch that there is not enough effort being done by the government to actually communicate what are their mitigating measures against adverse societal impacts like cost of living increases (e.g. the "compensation" plans), but to simply state "yep, $900 extra if we instigate the tax" and say that that is that is just as fallacious and - dare I say it - just as stupid.
Big companies are the same, and if anything from the failure of the RSPT has shown us is that big companies dominate this country more than the government does. That in itself is ridiculous and don't even think of raising the "but that is a democracy" argument - not even close. A mining company that will instantly close all its operations if a new tax comes onboard is very shortsighted - it is doing so without even considering how it may realign or reestablish itself so it does not have to shed jobs or without dramatic impacts on its bottom line. Again, it is a very simplistic "I don't like it so fob off" reaction with no room to consider change or mitigation of impacts.
I do subscribe to the belief that because Australia contributes only 0.01% (or whatever minuscule number it is) then I don't see the point in us having to bear the enormous cost that very well may not achieve anything but social hardship. Get China, America, India, Europe to hop on board then I'll be happy to support it.
There are a number of reasons - cynical, political and just downright ridiculous - why America won't support or install a carbon tax or other kind of carbon trading system. Heck, they are even very stubborn that they won't support the EU's carbon taxing of airlines entering the EU (but it will come - the US can only resist so long so they'll just have to learn to "deal with it"). They are the same reasons why America has been resisting every environmental effort since the 1960s. Sometimes they appear to "do it" in spirit, but in practice they are resisting very strongly, which is not helped due to the separation of powers between their national level politics and the states.
Europe is already on board with its own carbon reduction scheme, and it has rather aggressive carbon reduction targets to be achieved within the next 10 years.
Like
Alanslegal said, who are you going to wait for before you do anything? So "most" of the world is doing "nothing". So we should also do nothing?
A real investment and effort is required for research, development and implementation of sustainable technologies. A carbon tax will help fund such efforts, because the societal carrot so far is just not doing it. Of course, if you are a non-believer of climate change then I'm sorry we can't help you and vv.
I swear the more I hear Tony Abbott argue that the carbon tax is wrong because Labour promised no carbon tax at the last election, the more I want something
really bad to happen to him and the next Tony Abbott wannabe.
Oh and with regards to my comment "But at what point do we say the cost to society too great?" there are other problems such as the Middle East, North Korea and perhaps even China that pose a far greater risk to humanity in the next 50 years than climate change...
What kinds of problems? Would you say that the funding and efforts in solving these problems are insufficient right now?
At the very least, I stand by my argument that I would like to see the monies collected from this tax reinvested in both mitigating the effects on end consumers
and serious research, development and technology transfer in sustainable technologies. Again, this is where the government is failing to either consider or report on the proposed use of the tax's funds, but that does not mean we should not implement a carbon tax or some kind of trading scheme.
I will also repeat that the communication by the government as to the full details of how this tax will be implemented and managed is very poor, although in part this is not helped at all by the popular media.
In any case - for those that think this is a bad idea, what do you think is a more effective way of addressing the issue of climate change if not via a carbon tax?