The real joke of Net Zero
If ever you need proof Anthony Albanese and Labor’s Net Zero agenda is not about the interests of Australians but their own ideology, look no further than the Prime Minister’s visit to the UN this week.
The headlines have been about Albanese’s brief meeting with US President Trump and the speech from Trump himself.
But dig a little deeper and you see something else going on.
The Prime Minister will use his final full day in New York to launch a climate action blitz, promoting Australia’s new ambitious 2035 target pledging to cut emissions by 62-70 per cent and seeking funding support from global investors to turbocharge Labor’s renewables revolution.
So while he’s pursuing an agenda that will make your bills go up while your electricity supply gets worse, he’s spruiking that agenda to the world.
And why, you might ask? Notice something in that quote?
He’s “seeking funding from global investors”.
Later in the report, it is said that Albanese “wooed top US bank and investment firm chief executives under a strategy to turbocharge funding for clean energy projects”.
Well, ADVANCE told you it was about dollars and destruction and here we are.
Now there are, of course, circumstances where overseas investment into our economy helps build our prosperity.
But that’s not what this is.
This is an admission that the government’s agenda is not possible without surrendering parts of our grid to foreign investment.
This is something especially galling in light of the Senate inquiry into climate “misinformation”, which claims to want to explore the influence of foreign funding on anti-Net Zero campaigning.
Meanwhile, right under our noses, Albanese is handing the cap around to get foreign corporations and businesses building wind and solar farms across our farms and coast lines.
In his speech, President Trump called the renewable energy agenda a joke. He’s just echoing what ADVANCE has been saying for years now.
Overseas corporations are getting rich off our government’s deliberate strategy to vandalise our energy grid.
If it wasn’t so serious, it really would be a joke.
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