Climate Governance and Federalism in Australia
Source Title
Climate Governance and Federalism: a Forum of Federations comparative policy analysis
ISBN
Faculty
Faculty of Business and Law
School
School of Management and Marketing
Collection
Abstract
This chapter outlines a situation where a country with heavy reliance on carbon-intensive energy resources has faced substantial greenhouse gas dilemmas; where those dilemmas manifest themselves in strong ideological and partisan differences; and where both the central government (the Commonwealth) and the States have broad licence in climate change policymaking. It finds that the need for coordination can be exaggerated and that federalism has been a facilitating rather than a hindering factor in Australia, with constituent unit action compensating for central government inaction.