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Nationals poised to make call on net zero emissions

David Littleproud and fellow Nationals will meet following a party vote to walk away from net zero.

David Littleproud and fellow Nationals will meet following a party vote to walk away from net zero. Photo: AAP

The Nationals could be poised to ditch the contentious Net Zero climate policy at a special party meeting on Sunday morning amid a bitter brawl with the Liberals.

The Nationals’ federal council voted on Saturday to dump net-zero.

Leader David Littleproud and his colleagues will meet in Canberra on Sunday amid speculation they will follow that lead.

The outcome of the party room meeting has not been predetermined but Littleproud was sharply critical of the pursuit of net zero while “the rest of the world is pivoting”.

“We can’t mitigate for the world,” he told reporters on Saturday.

“We’ll peg ourselves to the rest of the world, not streak ahead of them, but stick with them.”

Net-zero policy has become a sore spot within the federal coalition following its convincing May election defeat, with the Liberal Party undertaking its own energy policy review.

Liberal leader Sussan Ley has said she does not want to pursue net zero “at any cost”.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese chose not to remark directly on the possibility of a Nationals’ climate policy that linked Australia’s emissions cuts to the performance of other countries when queried on the sidelines of the APEC summit.

“But on climate change, climate change is real,” he told reporters in South Korea.

“Climate change is having an impact.”

“I’m an advocate for action on climate change, not just by Australia but by the globe because we all need to act.”

The Nationals leader said he believed in human contribution to climate change but thinks the response should have a greater emphasis on adaptation.

“There is not just one way that we can actually address this, not just in mitigation of reducing emissions, but also adaptation,” he said.

Sunday’s party room meeting will be informed by a Page Research Centre report commissioned by the Nationals.

Under the Paris Agreement signed a decade ago, Australia and other member states must increase their emissions reduction targets every five years and cannot water them down.

The Labor government is committed to net zero by 2050 and is chasing an interim target of 62 per cent to 70 per cent emissions cuts by 2035.

A target of 82 per cent of electricity sourced from renewables by 2030 is key to meeting climate its goals.

Households, the economy and the environment will all be hit hard by unchecked climate change, Australia’s first National Climate Risk Assessment revealed in September.

-AAP

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