Australia has a new ‘Climate Party’ formed around the climate emergency. It is called Independents for Climate Action Now, ICAN.
Environmental scientist Jim Tait is leader of the party and a senate candidate in New South Wales. He wrote on Facebook:
“ICAN is a party of allied Independents bound by a commitment to delivering effective, scientific evidence-based policies to address the Climate Emergency. Science informs us that climate change is an existential threat to human society and life as we know it.
An emergency situation requires an emergency response. It requires Climate Action Now!
ICAN aims to:
• Disrupt Australia’s party based political system by making climate change a non-partisan issue
• Provide additional voting options for the 60% of Australians who want ‘effective action on climate change – even if it costs us economically.’ (Lowy Institute 2018)
• Put major parties on notice that their climate policies do not reflect the science in terms of addressing the climate emergency
• Move the balance of power to a broad political block of climate action committed independents
• Raise the profile of the climate emergency amongst the Australian electorate
• Put our nation on a path toward collaborative international action that CAN avert climate catastrophe, and
• Provide our youth with hope for a viable future
While the costs and commitments needed to address the climate emergency are high, like many serious challenges it also has a silver lining in the opportunities it presents for investment, employment, nation building, technological innovation and societal progress.”
https://twitter.com/ICAN_NOW/status/1115937449580957696
“We have the know how to solve the climate emergency. We just don’t have the political will. That’s why I stand for the Senate as an Independent for Climate Action Now. I’m passionate about Australia’s transformation to a zero emissions future. Addressing the climate emergency can create jobs, build communities, create new industries and save our future.”
~ Paul Wittwer
“A climate emergency declaration is kind of like a restart button for us to go into the future.”
~ Kammy Cordner Hunt, scientist and candidate running for Independents for Climate Action Now, ICAN
#ClimateEmergency interview in Mitchell’s Front Page on 94.7 The Pulse: Kammy Cordner Hunt is running for Independents for Climate Action Now, ICAN, in the election for the Victorian Senate
> ICAN’s climate policy platform:
www.i-c-a-n.com.au/policy
> ICAN’s home page:
www.i-c-a-n.com.au
> ICAN’s Twitter account:
www.twitter.com/ICAN_Vic
Merging of two climate emergency-focused parties
Since 2013, Save the Planet party has been the only party in Australia running on an emergency speed transition to restore a safe climate as its number one issue. With the emergence of first the One Planet party and now ICAN, that’s no longer the case.
For the federal election in May 2019, ICAN managed to get the official party registration just before deadline, whereas they other two parties didn’t.
The rural focused party One Planet was launched in October 2018, founded by Mansfield business woman, former shire councillor and experienced political candidate and campaigner Kammy Cordner Hunt.
One Planet recently announced that they had joined the Melbourne-based party Save the Planet to focus on the issues of global warming, creating an alliance under the name One Planet, (Save Our One Planet Alliance) where each of the two parties maintain their current policies but share a set of goals and a constitution developed specifically for the purpose of the current federal election in Australia.
For the upcoming federal election, however, One Planet missed out on party registration by about two weeks. Kammy Cordner Hunt from One Planet has therefore instead decided to run as #2 on the ICAN Victorian Senate ticket for the lower house.
Save the Planet was founded in 2013 by Adrian Whitehead and focuses two key short-term objectives “to give us the best chance of avoiding catastrophic climate change and saving this planet, with a focus on maximum protection of human and non-human life.” The objectives are to drive the creation of Emergency Plans for Safe Climate Restoration, and to implement an Emergency Speed Transition (10 years or less) to a Safe Climate Economy.
Adrian Whitehead and Philip Sutton from Save the Planet party – in December 2014
Save the Planet’s policies fall into the following areas:
• Eliminating net emissions of greenhouse gases
• Returning to a safe climate (pre-industrial temperature and ocean heat and acidity)
• Emergency speed cooling to avoid current and near-term climate-related disasters.
• Preparing for climate change (that is not avoided)
• Creating a sustainable future
“Outside of these core climate and sustainability related policies, Save the Planet strives to be politically neutral. Therefore, any decision made by an elected candidate would be made as a matter of conscience, while noting that these decisions must not conflict with our core climate policy in any way and must meet our “good character” test.”
“If we want to avoid a climate catastrophe, we must make global warming the primary election issue. Unlike any other party, Save the Planet’s number one issue is Global Warming and the solutions needed for a Safe Climate.”