Lee's 2nd reading speech in Parliament
Greens MP Lee Rhiannon introduced the Peak Oil Response Plan Bill in the Legislative Council on 8 May 2008. The Bill is still being debated (as at 1/3/2009).
Extract from Hansard, Parliament House, Sydney
PEAK OIL RESPONSE PLAN BILL 2008
Page: 42
Bill introduced, and read a first time and ordered to be printed on motion by Ms Lee Rhiannon.
Second Reading
Ms LEE RHIANNON [4.16 p.m.]: I move:
That this bill be now read a second time.
The Greens Peak Oil Response Plan Bill 2008 deals with one of the most
challenging issues of our time—oil vulnerability. The term "peak oil"
describes the phenomenon whereby global conventional oil production
will reach a peak and then start an irreversible decline. The rising
price of petrol and other oil products and the decline in these energy
supplies will increasingly dominate the work of all levels of
government in the coming months and years. We need a plan to respond
and manage the peak and decline of oil. The Greens bill provides a way
forward.
The Greens peak oil response plan sets up a Peak Oil
Taskforce to inquire into and report on the best strategies to mitigate
the impact of peak oil on New South Wales; it requires a moratorium on
constructing oil-dependent infrastructure, such as motorways, to be in
place while the task force undertakes its work; and it requires that
once the Peak Oil Taskforce has completed its work the New South Wales
Premier will respond to the task force's recommendations by developing
a comprehensive action plan across government, with its implementation
overseen by a parliamentary committee.
Interest rates, food
bills, construction costs and many other aspects of our day-to-day
lives will be negatively impacted because of the oil scarcity. The New
South Wales Government will be highly irresponsible if it does not back
the peak oil response plan. A number of governments, in Australia and
overseas, are preparing for peak oil. A report commissioned by United
States President George W. Bush's Department of Energy has detailed the
enormity of peak oil. The report states:
The world has never faced a problem like this. Without massive mitigation more than a decade before the fact, the problem will be pervasive and will not be temporary. Previous energy transitions (wood to coal and coal to oil) were gradual and evolutionary; oil peaking will be abrupt and revolutionary.
One of the authors of
this report is Robert Hirsch, an energy consultant to the oil industry,
who has previously worked for the RAND Corporation, Exxon and the
Atomic Energy Commission. This issue could not be more real and could
not be more urgent. Peak oil is about the inevitable decline of oil
supplies, and definitely the end of cheap accessible oil. The peak
refers to the top of the bell curve. When peak oil is reached, oil will
still be available, but what is left is far harder to extract,
environmentally far more damaging to retrieve, often of much poorer
quality, and often located in areas subject to numerous geopolitical
issues.
Oil prices are climbing. In the last seven years the
price of oil has risen fourfold. In 2003, the price of West Texas
Intermediate crude oil—a widely watched benchmark of crude oil
price—averaged about $US31 per barrel. By 2006, the average was about
$US66 per barrel, and in mid November 2007 the price rose to more than
$US90 per barrel. As of this week, West Texas crude hit more than
$US123 a barrel.
The estimates on when we reach peak oil vary.
We may not be able to pinpoint the exact date until after it has
happened—this is known as the "rear-view mirror effect". However, there
is wide agreement that oil supplies are in decline. The Australian
Petroleum Production and Exploration Association reports oil production
in this country peaked in 2000, and oil production in the United
States' peaked in 1970. Of the top 30 oil producing countries, 15 have
reached peak oil, including Iran, Kuwait and Russia. Of those that
remain, the reliability of the data supplied is questionable.
The 2007 report of the Senate Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport
Committee inquiry into Australia's future oil supply and alternative
transport fuels found that Australia's net self-sufficiency in oil is
expected to decline significantly as future discoveries are not
expected to make up for the growth in demand and the decline in
reserves as oil is produced. I recommend members read the report from
this inquiry. The committee's work further underlines the need for a
peak oil response plan in New South Wales. I take this opportunity to
congratulate my colleague Greens Senator Christine Milne on her work in
establishing the inquiry and in this most important area. Last month
the Federal Minister for Resources and Energy, Martin Ferguson,
speaking at the conference of the Australian Petroleum Production and
Exploration Association stated:
With only about a decade of known oil resources remaining at today's production rates, Australia is looking down the barrel of a $25 billion trade deficit in petroleum products by 2015.
Unfortunately, many of the Federal Government's plans involve delaying a responsible response to Australia's oil vulnerability. The Federal infrastructure Minister, Anthony Albanese, has committed to $17 billion over five years for the national roads network. Matt Mushalik, a former civil engineer and a peak oil adviser, questioned Minister Albanese about this irresponsible policy in the era of peak oil and was given the response, "You won't get people out of their cars." The head-in-the-sand approach from Federal Minister Albanese further underlines the need for New South Wales to take the lead on dealing with oil vulnerability. Mr Mushalik, who has done extensive work on peak oil in Australia and overseas, has warned that we are already far behind in the planning needed to handle peak oil. He stated recently:
Since Australian oil production will be half in just 10 years a smooth transition is absolutely impossible.
Mr Mushalik also noted:
Economic growth itself is dependent on the oil price and the physical availability of oil.
Scientists, economists and energy specialists have been talking about
the peak oil phenomenon for more than 40 years. M. King Hubbert
presented a paper to a 1956 meeting of the American Petroleum
Institute, predicting that overall petroleum production would peak in
the United States between the late 1960s and the early 1970s. This
prediction came true in 1970, and people have spoken of Hubbert's Peak
ever since.
The Greens are ready to work with all parties in
the Parliament on this most critical issue. The peak oil response plan
provides a means to progress this most important task. As the reality
and ramifications of a global peak sinks in, unlikely allies are coming
out of the woodwork—peak oil is gaining cross-party, non-partisan
support in many countries. In 2005 in the United States the Republicans
passed motions calling on America, in collaboration with other
international allies, to establish an energy project with the
magnitude, creativity and sense of urgency of the man on the moon
project to develop a comprehensive plan to address the challenges
presented by peak oil.
In New South Wales such a comprehensive
plan is set out in the bill. The key vehicle of the plan is the peak
oil task force, which will be made up of at least five people appointed
by the Premier. The work of the task force will be very specific in
assessing the impact of peak oil. This work will be undertaken by
analysing the oil-based fuel requirements of the State and the people
of New South Wales until 2020. This work will be undertaken for
different fuel types and economic sectors. It will determine the effect
of peak oil on critical local facilities in New South Wales, including
hospitals, schools and emergency services, and the provision of food
and water supplies. Determining the impact of peak oil on the New South
Wales economy and employment trends will be critical to the work of the
task force. It will assess where retraining and redeployment of
employees will be needed. Specific attention will be paid to the
Australian motor vehicle industry and the mining industry.
Considering the geographic spread of New South Wales and that almost
one-third of the population—27 per cent—live in rural and remote areas,
the task force will investigate the disproportionate effect of peak oil
on disadvantaged, regional and rural communities. In considering how to
prepare the people of New South Wales for peak oil, the task force will
assess the need for public education, a system of fuel rationing and
what new public transport infrastructure will be needed. There is a big
shift back to public transport. Last year there were an additional 10
million trips on CityRail. Patronage on the East Hills line rose by 7.5
per cent and patronage on the Illawarra line increased by nearly 4 per
cent. This is a significant shift in one year and further highlights
the need for the Government to address the oil vulnerability we are
already facing.
The task force will pay particular attention
to the impact of peak oil on transport and agriculture in New South
Wales. Petroleum products comprise 50 per cent of energy end use, and
three-quarters is directly consumed by the transport sector, in the
main in road and air transport. Australia is the third highest per
capita consumer of gasoline in the world after the United States and
Canada. The Australian Geological Survey Organisation estimates that
Australia's self-sufficiency in oil and condensate is expected to
decline from 85 percent in 1999 to 42 per cent in 2010.In the transport
sector most of these petroleum products are used by private cars and
commercial trucks for inter and intra freight movements.
When it comes to considering public transport options, the work of the
task force will be extensive. Expanding public light and heavy rail,
bus and ferry services in New South Wales cities and regional areas
will play a major part in the response to peak oil. The urgent need for
this work was highlighted at a recent conference on the future of
Western Sydney. Curtin University Professor Peter Newman warned that
unless public transport was considerably expanded, vast areas would be
in danger of dying from the outside in. Professor Newman described
United States car-dependent cities where whole suburbs are boarded up
and abandoned. People's dreams have gone and it is not the subprime
mortgage meltdown, it is peak oil prices.
Professor Newman
was one of the authors of "Sustainability and Cities: Overcoming
Automobile Dependence", a study that drew up a comprehensive database
from 46 cities around the world on oil depletion. The study shows that
reducing car dependence, promoting electric transport and reducing
urban sprawl are critical factors if cities are to become more
sustainable. This study found that private transport energy use per
capita is inversely proportional to city population density by factors
of up to six-to-one.
Brian Fleay, an associate of Murdoch
University's Institute for Sustainability and Technology Policy and
author of "The Decline of the Age of Oil", argues that the challenges
for Australia's farmers will be greater than for city-based private car
users when peak oil kicks in. The agriculture industry—through the use
of machinery, fertilizers and pesticides—is highly dependent on the
petroleum industry. This will be assessed by the task force with regard
to food affordability and availability, and the impact of alternative
fuels on agricultural practices.
While the introduction of
nitrogen and phosphorus fertilisers prevented the collapse of cereal
cropping in this country last century, this farming practice now has a
limited life because of looming petroleum shortages. At every stage oil
products are involved in fertiliser production. Diesel power plays a
critical part in mining the phosphorus minerals and sulphur needed to
manufacture and distribute the superphosphate on farms. Nitrogen
fertilisers in widespread use in Australia since the 1960s are even
more dependent on oil products. Nitrogen fertilisers, such as urea,
which is made from natural gas, have become extensively used to
maintain yields and farm produce quality from Australia's poor soils.
Their manufacture is eight to 10 times more energy intensive than
phosphate fertilizers.
Mr Fleay has described this form of
agriculture—mechanized agribusiness—as a way of converting petroleum
into food. Using these intensive fertilising methods, Mr Fleay has
pointed out that Australia has been successful in feeding 60 million to
80 million people in the world. This past success means that today
Australian farmers face a greater challenge than farmers anywhere else
in the world in adapting industrial agriculture to the era of peak oil.
Clearly, dealing with peak oil is a complex issue that will require the
Government to work closely with communities across the State. To
facilitate the bill this will require the task force to hold public
meetings, and enable the public and non-government organisations to
make submissions.
The Australian Association for the Study of
Peak Oil and Gas, and EcoTransit are two organisations that have been
consistent voices warning of the implications of peak oil and putting
forward well-researched and argued solutions. The Association for the
Study of Peak Oil and EcoTransit could make an invaluable contribution
to the work of this task force. The Association for the Study of Peak
Oil has called for planning to be undertaken now to deal with petrol
droughts and oil crises just as we do for cyclones and bushfires. The
Peak Oil Taskforce will be established by the Premier and will commence
operations within one month after the commencement of this Act.
There is no solution to peak oil. Our responsibility is to mitigate
against its catastrophic effects. We must accept that science,
technology or fairy godmothers will not be able to summon an
alternative out of thin air. However, as there are ongoing attempts to
promote a business as usual approach arguing that substitutes for
petroleum products are available, I will outline why these assertions
are misleading. Energy from alternative fossil fuels such as tar sand
oil, liquid coal and first generation biofuels have unacceptable
environmental consequences and biofuels will contribute to food
shortages and famine in many low-income countries.
The
energy-intensive conversion of tar sand generates two to four times the
amount of greenhouse gases per barrel of final product as the
production of conventional oil. Oil from shale is an even bleaker
prospect. It has one-tenth the energy of crude oil. Converting shale to
oil requires a huge amount of energy—possibly as much as 1,200
megawatts of generating capacity to produce 100,000 barrels per day.
Coal can be converted to diesel fuel via an incredibly expensive and
water-intensive process that would eventually produce about double the
carbon dioxide emissions of conventional diesel. The only example of
coal gasification and liquefaction being done on a large scale is from
Nazi Germany, where significant amounts of slave labour were used.
Some oil companies are vigorously pursuing these alternatives—with
support from the New South Wales Government in some cases—in the hope
they will allow us to blithely continue our consumerist,
expand-at-all-costs, growth-is-good lifestyles. Biofuels offer no
immediate solution when dealing with oil vulnerability. The United
Nation's Food and Agricultural Organisation argues in a paper released
last month that biofuels negatively affect those in poorer countries as
these crops compete directly with food crops for farmland, water and
investment money. Food prices increase as a result and, the paper says,
biofuels "put at risk access to food by the poorest sectors."
Fertilisers used to grow biofuel crops release more greenhouse gases
than the fuel produced would save.
Biofuels are now popular
with politicians and corporations keen to present themselves as serious
about the energy crisis. For many biofuel backers the real interest is
in the bottom line. Worldwide investment in biofuels rose from $5
billion in 1995 to $38 billion in 2005 and it is expected to top $100
billion by 2010 with the likes of BP, Ford, Shell and Richard Branson
eyeing off the profits to be made. The biofuel industry is directly
linked to rainforests being cut down to make way for crops and peat
bogs being drained—both valuable as carbon sinks that absorb carbon
dioxide from the atmosphere. It has been estimated in the United States
of America that if even half of the country's automotive fuel came from
corn-based ethanol, 80 per cent of the country's cropland would have to
be given over to biofuel crops. The argument pushed in some quarters
that the Australian biofuel industry does not encounter the same
problems as overseas is misleading. Agricultural land in Australia
plays a critical role in food export crops. We cannot afford to lose
any of this land to biofuel crops, and the spin off of greenhouse gas
emissions from fertiliser intensive biofuel crops cannot be ignored.
A recent CSIRO report on biofuels in Australia warns that a large-scale
biofuels industry could force the import of wheat in drought years,
attracting significant biosecurity risks. The report states that if the
ethanol industry does expand this will see increased competition with
grains for food and with feed grain for the livestock industry. Land,
water and labour in regional Australia will also come under competition
pressure if the ethanol industry expands. Many of the other plants
being touted as rich sources of biodiesel—often because of their
hardiness and ability to grow on marginal land—are classified as
invasive weeds, and the Invasive Species Council of Australia has
strongly recommended against their importation.
A wide-ranging
debate is occurring about the role of biofuels in meeting the oil
crisis. What we need to build into this dialogue is the agreements that
we do not make policy decisions on the possible eventual development of
biofuels that cater for private vehicle use. We have the fancy name
biofuels, but until we have a fuel that does not increase greenhouse
gas emissions, does not compete with food production, and does not
damage biodiversity we must ensure public policy is addressing how our
economy, agriculture, transport and all activities change to meet the
inevitable reduction in liquid fuels. We cannot allow public policy to
work on the assumption that enviro-friendly biofuels allow a business
as usual position on private vehicle transport.
The Greens are
also unequivocal on another purported alternative to oil—nuclear
energy. Nuclear energy is unsafe and expensive, produces dangerous
radioactive waste, requires fossil fuel input at all lifecycle stages,
will provide no discernable reduction in greenhouse gases once the high
grade uranium is exhausted and contributes to the proliferation of
deadly weapons. There is a role for electric vehicles but this form of
transport will not replace petrol-powered cars and trucks. Considering
that most of our electricity comes from coal-fired power stations, the
resulting greenhouse gas emissions from electric cars minimise any
advantage that could be gained from these non-petrol driven vehicles.
We believe that a clean energy future will include a number of
different complementary technologies such as wind, solar, wave and
tidal, biomass from waste products, and small-scale hydro projects.
Energy efficiency measures have an enormous role to play in managing
oil vulnerability, one that is frequently glossed over in the rush to
find a substitute fuel. As numerous studies have shown, this has the
added benefit of generous cost savings for relatively simple actions.
The Federal Government's 2004 energy white paper reported that many
Australian businesses and households could save 10 per cent to 30 per
cent of their energy costs without reducing productivity or comfort
levels. These reductions could save $5 billion to $15 billion, while at
the same time drastically reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
Peak oil will change our way of living, and affect the very structure
of society. On a global scale peak oil risks massive social
dislocation, global insecurity and conflict. It also risks a major
heightening of existing social inequities—and this is a key issue the
bill asks the task force to explore. As oil prices continue to climb,
those who can afford to will continue to live as they have. Those who
cannot afford to will suffer disproportionately. Unemployment will
increase, and financial markets will be thrown into turmoil. Vulnerable
and marginalised populations are likely to grow if we do not have a
peak oil response plan. The pressure will increase on essential
community services. How to develop an equitable scheme is a complex
matter, particularly for people living in rural and regional
communities where public transport is not an option. We will have to
prioritise the use of remaining oil stocks in a way that avoids
mirroring the current distribution of resources—that is, those at the
top get the cream, and the rest get what is left.
The task
force will assess the effect of peak oil on disadvantaged, regional and
rural communities, and work on a risk management strategy to deal with
the short-, medium- and long-term impacts of peak oil. This work will
be undertaken with local governments, businesses, unions and community
groups. By drawing up a list of priority uses of petroleum and other
oil-based fuels the task force will be able to recommend to the New
South Wales Government ways to ensure that dwindling oil supplies are
used responsibly and for the benefit of all. Author James Howard
Kunstler points out that suburbia was made possible by our exploitation
of cheap oil, and the end of cheap oil will also be its undoing. He
notes that only the very wealthy will be able to drive an hour each way
to work.
A number of jurisdictions are preparing for peak oil.
They include Spokane, San Francisco and Portland in the United States,
Kinsale in Ireland, and Totnes in the United Kingdom. In Australia,
Maribyrnong City Council, covering the inner suburban area west of the
centre of Melbourne, is probably Australia's most peak oil aware
council. Last month the council unanimously endorsed a peak oil policy
and action plan. In 2005 Queensland established the Queensland Oil
Vulnerability Taskforce with the aim of commissioning a report tabled
in 2007 entitled "Queensland's Vulnerability to Rising Oil Prices".
Queensland led the world when it took this action. Importantly, the
Queensland taskforce report identified that there was no single
government entity responsible for the development of policy for
long-term liquid fuel security. In Queensland this has fallen between
the cracks of at least nine different ministries and departments.
In August 2006 Brisbane City Council followed suit and established a
taskforce that was asked to prepare and respond to climate change,
increasing energy use, rising petrol prices and peak oil. These issues
are inextricably intertwined, and examining the interconnection is a
key focus of the New South Wales taskforce to be established by the
Greens bill. The Brisbane City Council Taskforce emphasised the
valuable economic opportunities available to those who act decisively
in confronting these challenges, for example through developing
sustainable industries.
In New South Wales the Greens
propose a moratorium on large oil-based infrastructure to be adopted
for the period of the work of the taskforce. We put this forward
because of the Queensland experience. Although the work of the
Queensland Government and the Brisbane City Council has been
groundbreaking, the impact has been limited because of ongoing motorway
construction projects, which dominate that State's transport plan.
Clause 11, if adopted, will put on hold work on such
infrastructure—including freeways, tollways, road widenings, bypasses,
road lane duplications, multi-level car parks and the like, unless the
infrastructure is needed to address a previously identified dangerous
road or black spot.
Locking ourselves into petroleum-dependent
projects will prove to be a very costly albatross. We must drastically
change planning priorities, both of transport planning and road design.
The planning is currently done almost entirely without consideration of
our dependence on rapidly dwindling supplies of oil. This amendment is
critical to the success of the work of the taskforce. Without a
moratorium we stand to undermine the very purpose of the Peak Oil
Response Plan. This Parliament must recognise its responsibility to
prepare New South Wales for oil shortages, and that means we need to
start safeguarding our petroleum products while awaiting the findings
of the taskforce. To follow through on the work of the taskforce the
Greens also propose that the Premier prepare a response to the
taskforce's report. This proposal is set out in another Greens
amendment, which sets out the need for a coordinated,
whole-of-government action plan to mitigate the negative impacts of
peak oil on the State and people of New South Wales.
This
response must include a specific and coordinated action plan that
includes mandatory requirements for each department to set targets for
the reduction of fuel use, what measures are needed to meet those
targets, and how those measures will be funded. The amendments also
provide for a committee of the Legislative Council to be charged with
"updating any relevant data, research, reports or other information
collected or referred to by the taskforce relating to peak oil,
overseeing the implementation of the response plan by each department
of the public service, and monitoring the reduction of fuel use by
those departments".
The peak oil phenomenon is so serious and
so urgent that the response outlined in this bill needs to be ongoing
and substantial. That is why there needs to be official oversight, and
continual updating. The Peak Oil Response Plan needs teeth, and these
amendments provide the means to achieve that. This matter is urgent. We
do not have another decade to waste. Ecotransit member Gavin Gatenby,
who spoke at a rally to stop the Iron Cove Bridge upgrade, stated, "The
decade of peak oil denial has cost Sydney and New South Wales dearly."
The bill is the first legislative response in New South Wales to peak
oil. If adopted, it will help stem the costs that Mr Gatenby has
identified. It deserves the support of all members of this House. There
is no room for institutionalised denial on peak oil. Right now Federal
and State governments are exporting this country's last oil and gas.
This is irresponsible. The Greens Peak Oil Response Plan Bill, if
adopted, will allow New South Wales to give a lead to the rest of the
country on this most critical issue.
Debate adjourned.
Last modified 09/05/2008 10:15:40








