Skip to content
Environment

Australia must aim for net zero by 2035: Community sector

Community sector 2 mins read

As countries begin announcing their proposed 2035 emission reduction targets at COP29 in Baku, Australia’s social service sector released a statement calling on the Australian government to aim for net zero emissions by 2035.

Signed by 41 organisations, the statement argues that to keep global warming at 1.5 degrees and do our fair share, the science says Australia should aim to reduce emissions to net zero by 2035. 2050 is too late.

ACOSS CEO, Dr Cassandra Goldie said: “People experiencing disadvantage, including First Nations communities, are impacted by climate change first, worse, and longest because they have access to fewer resources to cope, adapt and recover.

“We’re seeing firsthand the toll climate change is taking on people’s lives, mental and physical health, cost of living, housing, and quality of life. Their futures and wellbeing are squarely in the government’s hands, and having an ambitious science-based 2035 target is crucial.”

Speaking from COP29 in Baku:

ACOSS Program Director, Climate and Energy, Kellie Caught, said: “While there will be challenges, going slow on emission reduction will only cost the economy and society more and make poverty and inequality in Australia worse.

“So many of the solutions we need are already here. We must accelerate our action and address this crisis more fairly and equitably, prioritising people and communities experiencing disadvantage.”

Julie-Anne Richards, Oxfam Australia Climate Policy and Advocacy Lead, said: “Climate change is already affecting communities here in Australia with catastrophic floods, heatwaves and bushfires.

“In the Pacific, the impacts of climate change like worsening cyclones are being felt even more acutely, with a 700% increase in the number of people impacted by climate disasters this decade, compared to the previous decade.

“Australia has the opportunity and the responsibility to step up our climate ambition at home by setting a target of net zero by 2035, and to increase support to Pacific Islands facing worsening climate disasters.

“If we make big coal, oil and gas corporations pay for the climate damage they have caused we can do both.”

Reverend Faiimata (Mata) Havea Hiliau, Uniting Church in Australia said:

“Climate impacts on our social services and congregations are rapidly escalating. Climate change affects everyone, but not everyone equally. The disadvantaged, Pasifika people and First Nations peoples are being hit earlier and harder.

“Australia must stop digging up new fossil fuel reserves that we know we can’t in good conscience ever burn and it must lift its own ambition in reducing emissions.”

The full statement and list of 41 signatories can be seen here.

Media contact in Baku: Andrew Bradley, Media and Public Affairs Manager, Uniting +61 422 929 634

Media contacts in Australia: ACOSS media contact m: 0419 626155 e: [email protected]

For interviews with Oxfam spokespeople, please contact Lucy Brown at [email protected] or 0478 190 099.

More from this category

  • Environment
  • 17/04/2025
  • 18:11
AMCS

Health and Safety Among Top Concerns for Leaders According to the Latest AMCS Safety Management and Sustainability Trends Report

Leading industry experts share insights on trends in safety and sustainability and highlight the critical link between EHS and ESG LIMERICK, Ireland–BUSINESS WIRE– Health…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, International News
  • 17/04/2025
  • 12:15
Charles Darwin University

Working with nature, not against it: How our economies can grow with the environment

Economic growth doesn’t have to come at a cost to the environment, and the ways in which this is possible will be on display at a global conference being held in Australia for the first time. This year the Ecosystem Services Partnership (ESP) is holding its 11thglobal conferencein Darwin and will be the first time the major event has been held in Australia since its inception in 2008. The conference will focus on nature-based solutions (NbS), or actions and methods that use and protect ecosystems while addressing global challenges such as climate change, biodiversity loss, human well-being, food and water…

  • Environment, Federal Election
  • 17/04/2025
  • 11:47
Climate Media Centre

I’M NOT A SCIENTIST BUT I SEE THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE EVERY DAY: CONCERNED CITIZENS RESPOND TO DUTTON’S COMMENTS

As scientific authorities confirm the sixth coral bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef in less than a decade, concerned citizens are responding to Federal Coalition leader Peter Dutton’s comment at the ABC’s leaders debate last night. The opposition leader said he didn’t know if increasing frequency and intensity of weather events was due to climate change. First Nations peoples, farmers, doctors, climate disaster survivors, divers, and parents are all available for comment. Aunty McRose Elu is a senior Torres Strait Islander elder and climate activist, Saibai Island and Seisia, Far North Queensland: “How can you hope to be the leader…

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.