Australia politics live: Labor optimistic of nature laws deal with Greens; harsher fines and jail time for NDIS breaches under new bill | Australian politics

Labor optimistic of nature laws deal with Greens as summer break nears

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Labor is growing optimistic it can land a deal with the Greens to rush through its signature environment protection laws before parliament suspends for the summer break.

The government is desperate to pass legislation to overhaul the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act in the final two sitting days of the year, finally delivering on Graeme Samuel’s blueprint to fix the nation’s broken nature laws.

The bill was not listed on the draft program for Wednesday but Guardian Australia understands it will be quickly added to the run-sheet as soon as Labor is confident it has the numbers to ram the 1,500-page bill through the upper house.

The environment minister, Murray Watt, is genuinely open to a deal with either the Coalition or the Greens and has offered a raft of concessions to both in the hope of winning the support of either side.

As we reported yesterday, those concessions failed to woo either side.

Key events

Continuing his media rounds, and joining ABC RN Breakfast, Jim Chalmers rips into the Coalition with modelling released by the government that if Australia kept all coal-fired plants open for 10 years from 2028, it would cost the budget more than $17bn.

Pressure on energy prices comes from ageing coal-fired power, not renewables says the treasurer.

Chalmers says the modelling shows the Coalition’s energy plan is “harebrained”.

What the Coalition is proposing with this harebrained approach to net zero would push up power prices and swing a wrecking ball through the budget and the economy.

The older, traditional sources of energy are becoming less reliable as they get closer and closer to closure. I think, from memory, yesterday we had parts of six major power plants out of operation, and that puts upward pressure on prices.

The treasurer adds the Coalition’s energy policy is driven “100% by the internal party politics of the coalition party room”.

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