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Newcastle Herald
Newcastle Herald
National
AAP

Joel Fitzgibbon calls for Labor to lower its emissions targets

DROP IT: Hunter MP Joel Fitzgibbon says Labor should match the government's lower targets on carbon emissions. Picture: Alex Ellinghausen

A FEDERAL Labor frontbencher and Hunter MP has called on his party to match the Morrison government's carbon emissions reduction target.

Labor resources spokesman Joel Fitzgibbon wants Labor to lower its target to the higher end of the coalition's, according to an advance copy of his speech to be delivered in Sydney on Wednesday.

This would see Labor aim for a 28 per cent reduction of 2005 levels by 2030.

The opposition went to the federal election this year with a 45 per cent carbon emissions reduction target, while the Liberals set a 26-28 per cent reduction goal.

Mr Fitzgibbon will tell the Sydney Institute the government would be forced to act if the two parties were in agreement on a carbon reduction goal.

"The Prime Minister has largely avoided scrutiny and accountability on this subject because all the focus has been on Labor's more ambitious targets," Mr Fitzgibbon will say.

If there was policy certainty, investment confidence in the energy sector would return and power prices would drop.

"Labor needs to reach a sensible settlement on climate change. How many times are we going to let it kill us? Indeed, how many Leaders do we want to lose to it," Mr Fitzgibbon will say.

A less ambitious target would allow Labor to be "more ambitious on the road to 2050".

He will also reflect on party's election loss, saying Labor "confused and scared" the electorate and underestimated Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

Labor also opened itself up to a scare campaign with its economic policies, Mr Fitzgibbon will say.

"Scott Morrison's main cut-through message throughout the election campaign, and since, has been a promise to keep things just as they are," Mr Fitzgibbon will say.

"And in the midst of Labor's busy and confusing messaging, it worked."

Labor's "path to success" at the next federal election in 2022 would not be "a track to the right, back back to the sensible centre"

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