Skip to content
Environment, Government Federal

Intergenerational Report: tackling climate the number one priority for Australia’s future

The Climate Council 2 mins read

 

 

 

 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

24 AUGUST 2023

 

Intergenerational Report: tackling climate the number one priority for Australia’s future

 

URGENT CLIMATE ACTION will make the difference between prosperity and penury in the decades to come, according to the Intergenerational Report released today. 

 

A two degree increase in global temperatures is expected to cause disruption to productivity, and the agricultural and tourism sectors particularly. Yet the federal government’s current target of 43 percent emissions reduction on 2005 levels by 2030 is not sufficient to limit warming to 1.5 degrees.

 

This Intergenerational Report clearly shows how much Australia stands to lose economically if we don’t act now to tackle harmful climate change. Leaving climate change out of the conversation will have significant repercussions on future planning.

 

Climate Councillor and economist Nicki Hutley said: “Climate change is not just an environmental concern; it's an economic imperative. The Intergenerational Report shows climate change affects some of our most important economic sectors. 

“We are talking about losses in productivity, agricultural production, possibly tourism demand, and an increase in costs from extreme weather disasters. This is going to cost hundreds of billions of dollars.

“The Treasury estimates we are facing lost economic output to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars. These estimates don’t even include health and mortality yet, which we know are among the biggest of climate-related costs.

“Our choice is clear: take urgent climate action or endure substantial economic consequences.

“The extent of disruption rests on the action we take today to limit dangerous climate change driven by the burning of highly-polluting fossil fuels.”

Chief Climate Councillor Professor Tim Flannery, said: “Climate dwarfs everything else in this report. If we don’t fix it, nothing else matters. 

“The clock is ticking, and this year’s Intergenerational Report paints a stark reality: this is the make-or-break moment for humanity. This is another significant notch in a colossally long line of wake up calls to urgently address climate change this decade.

“This is a glaring reminder that our choices today determine the legacy we leave for tomorrow. Australia will need a much stronger 2035 emissions reduction target, including cutting by far more than 43 percent by 2030. 

“Governments must rally to drastically cut emissions and cease the extraction and burning of fossil fuels this decade. Every fraction of a degree of warming avoided, will be counted in lives and livelihoods saved.”

ENDS

For interviews please contact Zerene Catacutan on 0438 972 260 [email protected], or Jane Gardner on 0438 130 905 [email protected].

 


About us:

The Climate Council is Australia’s leading community-funded climate change communications organisation. It was founded through community donations in 2013, immediately after the then-Abbott Government dismantled the Climate Commission. We provide authoritative, expert and evidence-based advice on climate change to journalists, policymakers, and the wider Australian community. For further information, go to: climatecouncil.org.au Or follow us on social media: facebook.com/climatecouncil and twitter.com/climatecouncil

Media

More from this category

  • Government Federal
  • 10/12/2025
  • 11:55
eSafety

Australia makes history with the social media minimum age

eSafety will begin monitoring and enforcing compliance with the Australian Government’s social media minimum age from today, supporting parents and providing a crucial buffer for under 16s developing digital literacy and resilience. eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said the world-leading initiative was an important new addition to Australia’s online safety framework. “Enforcing a minimum account age of 16 will create normative change and give young people a reprieve from powerful and persuasive design features built to keep them hooked, often enabling harmful content and conduct online. “We recognise no single safety measure is a silver bullet but restricting social media…

  • Environment
  • 10/12/2025
  • 10:47
NSW EPA

KU-RING-GAI COUNCIL FINED FOR WATER POLLUTION INCIDENT

Ku-ring-gai Council has been issued a $30,000 Penalty Infringement Notice after a leachate leak from a legacy landfill beneath the North Turramurra Golf Course in July 2025. The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) was made aware of the incident on 10 July, when council reported that a pump used to manage leachate from the old landfill failed allowing contaminated water to enter a nearby unnamed creek. EPA Executive Director Operations Steve Beaman said Council was fortunate the incident didn’t escalate further. “The risk here for the surrounding environment was very high and real as the creek flows towards Ku-ring-gai Chase…

  • Banking, Environment
  • 10/12/2025
  • 09:32
Australian Conservation Foundation

NAB to face Australia’s first bank shareholder resolutions on nature risk on Friday

NAB shareholders will vote on Australia’s first bank shareholder resolutions on deforestation at the bank’s annual meeting on Friday. The resolutions call on the bank, which is Australia’s biggest agribusiness lender, to disclose how much it lends to customers involved in deforestation and set a strategy to stop financing it. Italy’s largest asset manager Anima, which manages more than €200bn, has indicated its support for the resolutions. The Californian public employee pension fund Calpers, which manage US$500bn in investments, has also indicated it will vote in favour. The shareholder resolution is facilitated by the Australian Conservation Foundation and co-filed by…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.