A group of kayakers paddled to a tiny beach outside the Australian prime minister’s Sydney harborside home yesterday to call for action on climate change ahead of next weekend’s election.
Protester Joseph Sikulu said he felt that the issue had dropped off the agenda ahead of the polls on Saturday in which conservative Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s Malcolm Turnbull faces Labor Party leader Bill Shorten.
“We just wanted to make sure that we could get it out... that climate change is put on the top of the prime minister’s agenda,” Sikulu said, after kayaking from north Sydney to a small beach outside Turnbull’s Point Piper mansion.
Photo: AFP
Protesters, some of whom wore sarongs and traditional woven skirts, held up letters spelling out “Stand up for the Pacific” and “Keep it in the ground” in reference to Australia’s rich reserves of coal, a key export for the nation.
Unlike former Australian prime minister Tony Abbott, Turnbull has long been seen as a supporter of action on climate change.
However, his government has been criticized for not setting high enough targets for carbon emission reductions, with skeptics saying its pledge to cut emissions by 26 percent from 2005 levels by 2030 falls short of the nation’s fair share globally.
Turnbull this week defended the target as “strong.”
Australia had “agreed to substantial cuts in emissions together with the other leading economies of the world in the Paris Conference,” he told the Australian Broadcasting Corp.
At the UN Climate Change Conference (COP21) in Paris in December last year, 195 governments agreed to a target of limiting global warming to “well below” 2°C compared with pre-industrial levels.
“I’m committed that we will and, as I’m sure the world will over the next few years, agree to higher targets,” Turnbull said.
Among yesterday’s protesters were members of the Tokelau community, who sang about the ocean around their homeland, a tiny Pacific territory of New Zealand, which is at risk of disappearing under the waves if climate change continues unabated.
“We understand that everybody is going to be affected by climate change but Tokelau is on the front line,” one of the singers, Pine Esera, told reporters. “It’s all about standing up for the Pacific,” she added.
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