Polly Hemming
@pollyjhemming.bsky.social
11K followers 870 following 340 posts
Director @australiainstitute.org.au's Climate & Energy Program. Climate integrity // Environmental markets // Greenwashing (exposing it, not doing it) *views my own*
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Reposted by Polly Hemming
Reposted by Polly Hemming
rodcampbell.bsky.social
The solution to this is easy:

1/ Stop unrestricted gas exports.

2/ Reduce Australian domestic gas prices with uncontracted gas.

3/ Make gas exporters pay their fair share of taxes and royalties.

4/ Approve no new gas projects.

Sign the petition here!
nb.australiainstitute.org.au/fix_gas_expo...
✍️ PETITION: Fix Australia's Gas Export Problem
✍️Sign the petition: Fix Australia's Gas Export Problem
nb.australiainstitute.org.au
Reposted by Polly Hemming
rodcampbell.bsky.social
Here's the ACCC today saying that gas exporters are ripping us off. Again.

"gas being offered & supplied by the exporters to the domestic market has declined over time, while LNG export volumes have increased."

@australiainstitute.org.au @markogge.bsky.social
www.accc.gov.au/system/files...
Reposted by Polly Hemming
mostafasalah.bsky.social
The journey was exhausting and frightening, surrounded by destruction, smoke, and chaos, with scenes that will remain in our memory forever. 💔💔💔
#Gaza#Palestine🇵🇸
Reposted by Polly Hemming
helenczerski.bsky.social
“Hard to abate” is the climate wonk’s term for an industry with no immediate route to zero carbon emissions. But I think there’s “hard to abate” & “expensive to abate” & then there’s “it’s just a bit difficult & we can’t really be bothered to abate”. None of this is impossible. We need to *choose*.
Reposted by Polly Hemming
asherwolf.bsky.social
The Vic government harped on about how they’d successfully closed the last group home back in 2019, when in reality they’d just handed off responsibility to neoliberal managers in privately run NFPs, which made it almost impossible for the Community Visitors scheme to provide a safeguard for ppl
Reposted by Polly Hemming
asherwolf.bsky.social
So Victoria’s Supported Independent Living accomodation services are all collapsing. Having worked for a couple of years in one of those mentioned in this article, this is unthinkable
theage.nzcow.com
📢 The state’s disability accommodation program is in danger of collapsing, endangering the group homes caring for many of the state’s most vulnerable residents.

👉 More news/weather bots
Thousands of Victorians with disabilities face losing their homes
www.theage.com.au
Reposted by Polly Hemming
Reposted by Polly Hemming
mrrexpatrick.bsky.social
Hey @albomp.bsky.social, if I request security info using #FOI, it’s exempt from release under the current law. If an anonymous person requests security info using FOI, it’s exempt from release under the current law. You’re gaslighting to extinguish transparency! #StickWithTruth #auspol
pollyjhemming.bsky.social
Also happens to be written by a carbon market proponent....the first line of the article is literally "I have a conflict of interest..."

The carbon market is a casualty of its own bad science not ideology or arbitrary opposition.
#auspol #climate
Screenshot of article in the monthly. Text exerpt says:
I have a conflict of interest in the debate over the value of carbon credits: I sell them. Derived from the Australian Carbon Credit Unit (ACCU) Scheme, these credits stem from a restoration project in Queensland’s Wet Tropics, a tiny 0.3 per cent of Australia’s landmass packed with more biodiversity than any other place on the continent. Twenty years ago, my partner and I bought a property on the Atherton Tablelands with a rare large rainforest remnant, spared from the rampant clearing of last century because of its impossible steepness. On our single precipitous paddock, the cattle had tramped narrow terraces along the contours on which to walk.
Reposted by Polly Hemming
bopeep99999.bsky.social
Buried further down, the glib legal disclaimer: "there is no suggestion it influenced the institute’s conduct. Nor is there any suggestion of wrongdoing"

So why a story? Why claim "an undisclosed donation (raises) transparency concerns"? Why repeated inferences it's been deliberately kept secret?🤷‍♂️
pollyjhemming.bsky.social
The left would rather lose the war than miss an opportunity for lateral violence. 🤷‍♀️
Reposted by Polly Hemming
pollyjhemming.bsky.social
Im not actually sure! But it would be a loss for everyone if they didn'taccept your sub over a technicality. Maybe contact the committee?
pollyjhemming.bsky.social
Im not sure if this counts (and Im sure youre already aware), but parliamentary committees typically don't accept submissions that have already been published, as they must be prepared solely for the purposes of the inquiry. www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentar...
Making a submission to a committee inquiry
The following advice is offered to assist those wishing to make a submission to a parliamentary committee. The main purpose of parliamentary committees is to carry out investigations and report the fi...
www.aph.gov.au
Reposted by Polly Hemming
allouryesterdays.bsky.social
Robyn Williams: Do you expect the limitation to use of fossil fuels to either running out of them, or to this climate effect?

Peter Ritchie-Calder: I think definitely that environmental factors...that you will simply be confronted with a situation which will make life virtually intolerable
Peter Ritchie-Calder: In the course of the last century we've put 360,000 million tonnes of fossil carbon into the atmosphere. On the present trends the accumulated requirements between now and 2000 AD will come out as something like 11,000 million tonnes of coal a year, 200,000 million tonnes of crude petroleum and liquid natural gas, and 50 million million cubic metres of natural gas. Remember, this is coming out of the bowels of the Earth, and now we are taking it out and we're throwing it back into the atmosphere, and into the climatic machine, into the weather machine, where it is beginning to affect the climate itself. Now this is a very serious matter, and to me there is no question that our climate has changed.

Robyn Williams: Do you expect the limitation to this ever-expanding use of fossil fuels to be due to either running out of them, or to this second question of climate effect?

Peter Ritchie-Calder: I think definitely that environmental factors...that you will simply be confronted with a situation which will make life virtually intolerable.

Robyn Williams: We've got these different possible techniques, there's a nuclear fusion, nuclear fission, solar power, tidal power and so on. What do you think will happen to determine which of these will become the satisfactory energy source? Do think it will be questions of scientific ingenuity. Do you think it will be questions about changing social patterns and use of energy or questions of money?
Reposted by Polly Hemming
pollyjhemming.bsky.social
From the Labor adviser who pitched “net zero fossil fuels” comes a sequel: “Don’t set climate targets too high, or the government might have to do something".
#auspol #climate
www.afr.com/policy/energ...
Screenshot of afr article
Labor policy adviser says to lower expectations on climate targets
Ryan Cropp
Ryan CroppEnergy and climate reporter
Aug 27, 2025 – 4.32pm

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A key Labor climate adviser has warned the government against setting its 2035 emissions target too high, arguing that any goal north of 60 per cent will require a major expansion of emissions reductions in the transport, industrial and agricultural sectors.

Frank Jotzo, the author of a forthcoming Labor-commissioned report into a potential carbon border tax, said excessively ambitious policies being proposed by some climate groups would be impractical and easily undermined by opponents of change.
Reposted by Polly Hemming
ketanjoshi.co
"any goal north of 60 per cent will require a major expansion of emissions reductions in the transport, industrial and agricultural sectors"

yep that is the entire point?????????????????????????????????????????????

www.afr.com/policy/energ...
Labor policy adviser says to lower expectations on climate targets
Ryan Cropp
Ryan Cropp
Energy and climate reporter
Aug 27, 2025 – 4.32pm

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Share





Gift this article


A key Labor climate adviser has warned the government against setting its 2035 emissions target too high, arguing that any goal north of 60 per cent will require a major expansion of emissions reductions in the transport, industrial and agricultural sectors.

Frank Jotzo, the author of a forthcoming Labor-commissioned report into a potential carbon border tax, said excessively ambitious policies being proposed by some climate groups would be impractical and easily undermined by opponents of change.
Reposted by Polly Hemming
pollyjhemming.bsky.social
It's really quite impressive how strenuously everyone in this article avoids talking about fossil fuels. Nearly a fifth of Australia’s emissions now come from digging up and sending fossil fuels overseas. #auspol @australiainstitute.org.au
australiainstitute.org.au/post/nearly-...
Reposted by Polly Hemming
badcyclist.bsky.social
‘The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.’
George Orwell- 1984