a decent menu, but missing the main course
- Written by Nicky Ison, Research Associate, Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney
The federal Labor Party this week released the details of its keenly awaited climate policy package.
With a commitment to cutting climate pollution by 45% on 2005 levels by 2030, compared with the Coalition’s 26-28% target, there was never a doubt that Labor’s policy agenda was going to be more ambitious than the government’s.
Read more: Shorten's climate policy would hit more big polluters harder and set electric car target
But what exactly does it include, how does it stack up against the scientific imperatives, and what’s missing?
By offering a broad platform, Labor has moved away from a single economy-wide policy solution to climate change, such as a carbon price or emissions trading scheme. Instead, it has opted for a sector-by-sector approach.
This is smart politics and policy. By developing a climate plan for each major sector – industry, electricity, transport, and agriculture and land – it is possible to modernise each sector in a bespoke way, thus driving more innovation and job creation while also cutting carbon pollution.

Authors: Nicky Ison, Research Associate, Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney
Read more http://theconversation.com/labors-climate-policy-a-decent-menu-but-missing-the-main-course-114606