"DON'T VOTE FOR WOODCHIP POWER" - KELLY TOLD
Eden-Monaro MP Mike Kelly is being challenged to stand up for the forests in his
electorate and vote to keep native forest wood out of the Mandatory Renewable
Energy Target (MRET) scheme this week.
Spokesperson for the Chipstop forest campaign, Ms Harriett Swift says that the
Government's Mandatory Renewable Energy Bill will be the death knell for forests
around Australia, but especially in our region.
"The proposed wood fired power station at the Eden chipmill will be just the
first cab off the rank," she says.
"It is one of a number of projects across Australia poised to take off, once the
regulatory regime is settled," she says.
Ms Swift says that while chipmill managers claim that their power station will
use "waste", without one million tonnes of native forest woodchipping each year,
there would be no waste.
"Industrial burning of native forest wood will help to prop up a dying industry
and there are also issues about emissions and unfair competition against genuine
renewables such as solar and wind."
"But the bottom line is that when you take account of the whole life cycle of
the fuel, industrial burning of native forest wood generates about six times the
greenhouse gas emissions as coal fired electricity," she says.
Ms Swift called on Mike Kelly to not to be influenced by the likely
redistribution of his electorate.
"While the new boundaries of Eden-Monaro will concentrate the native forest
logging industry and remove major plantation regions, it will also give
conservation minded voters more clout in a more marginal electorate," she says.
17 August 2009