Skip to content
Environment, Government Federal

Australia drops to 52nd place on global climate index

Australian Conservation Foundation 2 mins read

Australia has dropped two places on this year’s global Climate Change Performance Index, chiefly because of the government’s plans to increase coal and gas production.

The annual Climate Change Performance Index compares the climate action performance of 63 countries and the EU, which together account for more than 90% of global climate emissions.

“While the Albanese government’s renewable energy rollout is commended, Australia has been marked down for continuing to subsidise fossil fuels and approve new coal and gas projects,” said the Australian Conservation Foundation’s climate program manager Gavan McFadzean.

 “Australia is accelerating the decarbonisation of the electricity system but continues to sidestep the urgent need to phase out coal and gas production and exports.

“Since the election of the Albanese government, Australia has worked hard to repair its international reputation and demonstrate climate leadership.

“Despite Minister Chris Bowen’s important recognition at COP28 that the age of fossil fuels must end, Australia plans to increase production of coal and gas.

“While Australia joined the Clean Energy Transition Partnership last year, the Albanese government has dragged its feet on implementing those commitments and has instead signalled support for the fossil fuel sector.

“The government’s Future Gas Strategy, launched in May, envisages Australia opening massive new gas fields and continuing to burn and export the fossil fuel well beyond 2050.

“In September the government approved three thermal coal mine expansions.

“The Albanese government is failing to close the loopholes for public financing of coal and gas and continues to subsidise Australia’s outsized fossil fuel exports.”

The Climate Change Performance Index, which is compiled by NGOs Germanwatch, the New Climate Institute and Climate Action Network International, assesses countries on four categories: emissions, renewable energy, energy use and climate policy.

The index has been published annually at the COP since 2005.


Contact details:

Josh Meadows, ACF media adviser, 0439 342 992 or [email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Gambling, Government Federal
  • 24/03/2026
  • 06:46
Alliance For Gambling Reform

1000 days of inaction on gambling reform must stop – 40 groups call on PM to take urgent action

A coalition of unions, community, public health, church, academic and advocate groups have signed an open letter to the Prime Minister calling for urgent action on gambling reforms – 1000 days since the government received a parliamentary inquiry report into online and is still yet to formerly respond. The letter – signed by Unions NSW and the Victorian Trades Hall Council, ACOSS, the Salvation Army (Richmond), Mission Australia, GetUp, the Public Health Association of Australia, Australian Preventative Health Association, the Menzies Schol of Health Research and the NSW Council of Churches – acknowledges the government’s work on its social media…

  • Environment
  • 24/03/2026
  • 06:00
NSW Environment Protection Authority

HUNTER RIVER FISH KILL UPDATE

The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) continues to investigate a fish kill event in the Hunter River at Mount Thorley. Teams of officers have been taking water samples and following up leads in the community each day since the EPA was informed of the fish kill by government agencies on Friday, 20 March. NSW EPA Director Operations, DavidGathercole, said the EPA has directed significant resources to the matter, and water samples are being processed by the laboratory as a high priority. “Yesterday our officers saw live fish, including juvenile fish fry, swimming in the river and fish that appear to…

  • Environment, General News
  • 24/03/2026
  • 02:00
Sustainable Population Australia

Australia’s biodiversity report card leaves out destructive population expansion

No mention is made of the undeniable impact of Australia’s population growth on the nation’s declining biodiversity in the government’s first report to the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). The Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity (KMGBF)’s monitoring framework appears to be a process to monitor decline rather than repair biodiversity loss. Australia’s population expanded by nearly 9 million people or 46 per cent since the year 2000 and will reach 28 million usual residents in 2026. SPA estimates that there are up to another million people living in Australia below that categorisation. SPA experts are available for further comment Michael…

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.