Skip to content
Government Federal

Nationals’ net zero backflip would escalate disaster costs for regional communities

Climate Council 2 mins read

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MONDAY NOVEMBER 3 2025

The Nationals’ decision to ditch the net zero position it signed up to in 2021 as part of the Coalition will be costly for regional communities and farmers being hit by worsening climate disasters.

 

Climate Council CEO Amanda McKenzie said:  “Abandoning net zero means abandoning a safer future for Australians. It means worsening, climate-driven floods, fires and heatwaves. Communities will pay a high price, particularly in the regions.”

 

Climate Council Research shows abandoning net zero would:

  • Reduce economic output by $135-423 billion by 2063, with workers hampered by extreme heat.

  • Increase Australian Government spending on disaster recovery up to 7 times by 2090

  • Make more than 1.3 million Australian homes (8.8%) likely uninsurable by 2100

  • Double freight costs for regional communities in WA, NT And Qld

  • Dent property values by more than half a trillion dollars by 2050

 

Ms McKenzie said,  “This is about more than just chaos in the Coalition. In the real world, a net zero backflip aligns with more than 3°C of global heating that would cost farmers and regional towns billions of dollars in damage. The Nationals must explain how they’ll pay for the soaring insurance premiums, recovery bills and freight costs when escalating disasters strike regional communities.

 

“The Nationals aren’t standing up for the bush, or farmers - they are selling them out. While the Coalition flounders over climate basics we should focus on the opportunity to strengthen our national environment law - the EPBC Act.

 

"The Government's proposed reforms have a number of gaping problems: they fail to address climate pollution - the biggest threat to the environment; they will undermine our climate progress by denying the government power to limit climate pollution from massive fossil fuel projects; and they may speed up fossil fuel project approvals despite the harm they cause. Labor has a simple choice: partner with the climate wreckers, or stand with the millions of Australians who want our wildlife and the environment protected from climate harm.”

ENDS

 

For more on the consequences of abandoning Net Zero and climate targets: https://www.climatecouncil.org.au/resources/consequences-of-abandoning-net-zero/

 

For more on the ways that the EPBC could be fixed to address climate threats: https://www.climatecouncil.org.au/resources/epbc-fixing-australias-national-environment-law/

 

 

The Climate Council provides indpependent, expert and evidence-based advice on climate impacts and solutions to journalists, policymakers, and the wider Australian community.

 

For further information, go to: climatecouncil.org.au

Or follow us on social media: LinkedIn, Facebook, X

 

 


Contact details:

Contact: Jacqui Street 0498 188 528 or [email protected]

OR

The Climate Council media team on [email protected] or call 0485 863 063.

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Legal
  • 06/03/2026
  • 10:00
Australian Human Rights Commission

Joint statement on advancing the human rights of older persons in Australia

Friday 6 March 2026  This week, the Human Rights As We Age Network released a joint statement endorsed by over 20 organisations and individual advocates.   Formed in 2025, the Network is a coalition of key civil society organisations and individuals committed to working collaboratively to advance the human rights of older persons in Australia and internationally.   The statement: ‘Advancing the human rights of older persons in Australia: a national Human Rights Act for older persons in Australia’ calls for the introduction of a national Human Rights Act (HRA) as a key mechanism to advance and protect the rights of older persons in Australia.   Robert Fitzgerald AM, Network Co-Chair and…

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 06/03/2026
  • 06:00
Health Services Union

HSU urges federal government to make reproductive health leave a national employment standard

HSU urges federal government to make reproductive health leave a national employment standard The Health Services Union has used its submission to the Inquiry into the operation and adequacy of the National Employment Standard to argue for universal reproductive health leave. HSU, along with other unions, has been campaigning for 12 days of paid leave for reproductive health issues. The leave would cover speciality appointments and treatments relating to reproductive organs, including screenings for breast and prostate cancer, or the management of symptoms related to reproductive health, including periods, perimenopause, PCOS, endometriosis, vasectomy and hysterectomy, miscarriage and medical pregnancy terminations…

  • Government Federal, Indigenous
  • 05/03/2026
  • 15:21
Centre for Indigenous People and Work (CIPW)

Parliamentary Inquiry should look at workplace racism

Racism against First Nations people in the workplace should feature in the parliamentary inquiry into racism, hate and violence directed at Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people announced today, according to UTS Sydney’sCentre for Indigenous People and Work (CIPW). Director ofCIPW,Prof Nareen Young,welcomed the Inquiry as an important mechanism to explore the extent of workplace racism and recommend strategies to eradicate this. “Our research has found that racism against First Nations people in the workplace remains stubbornly prevalent,” Prof Young said. “At the current rate of progress, without further policy or legislative change, it could take another 118 years for…

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.