Australia to consider carbon trading

AUSTRALIA: Australia's conservative government softened its long-held opposition to carbon trading yesterday, prompting business…

AUSTRALIA:Australia's conservative government softened its long-held opposition to carbon trading yesterday, prompting business to warn the move could cost jobs and shift emissions offshore to China or Indonesia.

Prime minister John Howard has regularly ruled out imposing a carbon tax or setting up a national system of carbon trading to combat greenhouse gas emissions, saying Australia would only have carbon trading as part of a global system.

But with global warming and the environment emerging as key issues for national elections due later this year, Mr Howard said putting a price on carbon would have to be part of a long-term plan to combat global warming.

"I think we have to examine carbon pricing," he said, adding a straight carbon tax would damage Australia's economy and mineral export industries.

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Australia's manufacturing industry, however, said the government had to be careful to make sure any carbon pricing or trading system helped curb global emissions and did not simply transfer emissions offshore.

Carbon trading involves putting limits on emissions and allowing companies that cut pollution to sell their left-over emissions to other companies so they can meet their targets, ensuring a financial incentive to cut carbon emissions.

"If we reduce emissions in Australia and transfer those to Indonesia or Malaysia or China, that's not going to solve the problem," Australian Industry Group chief executive Heather Ridout told ABC radio.

Australia's mining industry said an international carbon trading system was inevitable.

"There will be a carbon price in a carbon-constrained world," Australian Minerals Council chief executive Mitch Hooke said, adding the industry preferred carbon trading over carbon taxes as a way of encouraging lower emissions.

Mr Howard said a joint business-government taskforce, which is examining emissions trading, would report later this week and would outline how Australia could have a workable emissions trading system.

But Australia would only act if other nations signalled their intentions to consider carbon trading, he said. - (Reuters)