
By Tina Perinotto
11 June โ Leading environmental scientist Peter Newman has blasted The Australian newspaper for misrepresenting him in an article that appeared today (11 June) on federal government funding for schools as part of the stimulus package.
Professor Newman, a board member of Infrastructure Australia and Professor of Sustainability at Curtin University in Perth, told TFE in an interview late Thursday that he was extremely dismayed with The Australianโs representations of his comments and its campaign against the government in general.
The article was headlined: โAdviser slams $14.7 billion school cash as a โmissed opportunityโ.โ
It said: โOne of Kevin Ruddโs hand-picked Infrastructure Australia board members has slammed the federal governmentโs $14.7 billion education revolution program, claiming it has missed a generational opportunity to build environmentally sustainable schools across the nation.โ
Professor Newman said: โThey blew out everything I said. The headline, talking about slamming the government, I didnโt say that.โ
In recent weeks the federal governmentโs tightly scheduled rollout of funding for schools development has been criticised by construction advisers and suppliers because it appears sustainability is missing from the agenda and because there was too little time to implement anything but outdated style building projects, according to industry sources.
But Professor Newman told TFE that he blamed the states for evading their climate change responsibilities and for having no ready sustainable framework prepared for their schools development program and that his discussion of the difficulties of this was misrepresented in the article by The Australian.
[See the whole story here.]
In fact he supported what the federal government was doing, Professor Newman said.
โItโs great, what they are doing. Itโs the states that are the problem.
โFor years they have been going down a certain way of assessing schools and what they need and the green agenda has not been part of that and suddenly they get money and apply the frameworks that have been set for some time.
โThe federal government is saying we want a green agenda to be part of this funding but clearly itโs not.โ
โThey canโt actually force them to do it and they want it to be done quickly and the states werenโt literally ready and they fall back on the old ways of doing this because the states are not taking climate change seriously.
โThe blame has got to be directed at the states not the program.โ
Was the time-frame for rolling out the development funding reasonable?
โWhatโs reasonable when it comes to the environment and global climate change?
โThe only reasonable thing to do is to act dramatically,โ Professor Newman said.
In a statement issued in response to The Australian article Green Building Council of Australia chief executive, Romilly Madew, said the federal governmentโs schools package included a sustainability agenda.
In its $14.7 billion stimulus package for schools, the federal government committed that โany new [school] building will be designed to maximise energy efficiency including insulation, energy efficient solar hot water (where appropriate), energy efficient lighting, energy efficient glazing, energy efficient heating and cooling, and a water tank.โ
โWe urge the Australian Government, through the Coordinator General, to work
with the states to ensure sustainability measures are integral to their spending on
schools, and that transparent reporting is mandatory,โ Ms Madew said.
Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme
Professor Newman said the article in The Australian was part of a wider campaign to attack the government and climate change measures by the newspaper โ especially on the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme, which he said it was a mistake to oppose.
โThey are running a campaign against the government and itโs not a campaign I want to be part of. They are trying to parody everything the government wants to do including the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme,โ he said.
This was โplaying right into the hands of the Greens who are making merry with it,โ Professor Newman said.
โI think itโs a very important scheme. Itโs taking us from business as usual to a significant reduction and from that position.โ
It was also very important that Australia be part of a world shift to that new position.
โIf we continue to go down the track of idealistic statements that the Greens are making โ that it is worse than nothing โ thatโs ludicrous.
โAnyone who has been involved in climate issues as long as I have โ for 30 years โ would realise how dramatically better it is to pursue the CPRS rather than the do nothing option which is what will happen.โ
โThe science is very scary but what is more scary is if at the end of this period we have achieved nothing and we say to our grandchildren we could have put in place a scheme but we didnโt do anything.
โI am very wary of The Australian and their attacks on what the government is trying to do and itโs framed as if they are being green.โ
More telling he said was the newspaperโs generous coverage of the climate sceptic Ian Plimerโs recent book Heaven and Earth, despite the bookโs dismissal by Australiaโs most eminent scientists.
Criticism of Rudd Government misplaced
Professor Newman said suggestions that the Rudd Government had failed to deliver strong enough action on climate change was misplaced.
As well as the CPRS, he said, the federal government had also put in place a budget for urban train travel that was revolutionary.
โInfrastructure Australia has produced a budget for restructuring the countryโs transport that is radical and revolutionary.
โThey have $5 billion for urban rail which is quite historic.
โThe federal government has never given money for public transportโฆitโs a dramatic step forward.โ
