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Environment, Government Federal

Nature protected in law, but climate liability for ALP remains

The Climate Council 2 mins read

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
THURSDAY 27 NOVEMBER, 2025

THE CLIMATE COUNCIL congratulates Labor and the Greens for passing laws that strengthen protection for native forests and accelerate environmentally responsible renewable power. But the Council warns the Albanese Government is failing the climate test by giving new coal and gas projects a free pass on climate pollution.

Climate Council CEO Amanda McKenzie said: “This deal strengthens protections for our native forests, and provides a faster yes to responsible renewable energy projects that cut climate pollution. That will help protect communities from rising power prices and climate damage.

“But this 2025 law fails the climate test. All new coal and gas projects still get a free pass on climate pollution. In fact, the law forbids the Environment Minister from considering a project’s climate pollution when assessing whether it should go ahead. That is a gaping hole in a law that should protect nature from the ravages of climate change.

“Let’s be clear: the ALP has a growing fossil fuel problem. While voters expect the Government to deal with pollution from coal and gas, the Government is turning a blind eye to billions of tonnes of pollution that more fossil fuel approvals will add to this problem. This is a political liability that isn’t going away - and many voters are planning to mark them down over it.”

New national polling from YouGov, conducted for the Climate Council, shows seven in 10 voters wanted the Government to address climate change in the new environment law, and 44 percent of 2025 Labor voters said they would be less likely to vote for the Government again if climate change was left out of this law.

Climate Councillor Professor Tim Flannery said: “The Greens and Labor have been able to secure real wins, including better protection for native forests and a clearer path for renewable energy. That shows Parliament can work across the aisle to find solutions for the community, rather than get bogged down in politicking.

“The Greens have blocked fast tracking of coal and gas which would have been a disastrous outcome - equivalent to pouring petrol on a fire.

“But the job’s far from done. In the assessment pipeline sit 42 coal and gas projects that could release 8.7 million more tonnes of pollution yearly in Australia, undermining our climate targets, and progress. 

“Until we better regulate fossil fuel projects, one fifth of Australia’s climate pollution, a safer future for us and our kids will fall further out of reach.”

Analysis: What our new Environment Laws mean for climate

 


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