Coming Crises in Sustainability and Health will challenge the PM in his Leadership of the National Cabinet
June 23, 2020
Mr Morrison has created a National Cabinet to drive a singular agenda to create jobs. If it functions successfully as it has done over Covid, it will be a masterstroke of governance allowing state leaders from both major parties to interact for the common good without the damaging rancour shown in Parliament and the media.
However Mr Morrisons Cabinet creation may open the flood gates to a surge of Premiers ideas which might counter his set view of society and its economic functioning on the other side of the Covid crisis.
Indeed it would be surprising if all the leaders of the States and Territories shared his views. Surely they will seek to influence the agenda and if rebuffed, his masterstroke may crumble - not a good outcome for him.
The replacement of COAG by the National Cabinet as a long term measure has been questioned, but COAG has been an abysmal failure over many years on crucial issues such as Black deaths and air quality.
The National Cabinets success with Covid relates to the willingness to take expert medical advice. The question is whether this will continue on other issues. It should, because many are essential to good health.
To oversee the recovery, the National Cabinet will establish six National Cabinet Reform Committees on Rural and Regional Australia, Skills, Energy, Infrastructure and Transport, Population and Migration and Health.
As expected, the most crucial issues are missing - the crises which are eating away the fabric of our society and economy, climate change, environmental sustainability and now Australias miserable failure to act on the recommendations of the 1991 Royal Commission and the unacceptable disadvantage of Aboriginal peoples.
Current and longstanding failures on these fundamental issues diminish us as a nation.
However the National Cabinets priority of job creation much can be achieved within these three issues.
Climate change and jobs
The governments of Tasmania, South Australia and ACT have progressive policies on the development of renewable energy and its role in job creation, a healthy environment and mitigating climate change. The Plan from Beyond Zero Emissions indicates in the next five years renewable energy could create 124,000 jobs in construction and 22,000 on-going jobs.The recent Clean Energy Report from the Clean Energy Council and the Ernst and Young report consolidate these findings.
Consequently some States may well demand action on renewable energy, on policies which have impeded these jobs and on grid reform to improve efficiency.
By contrast the governments fossil fuel agenda will be supported by two Labor states and the Northern Territory, all intent on maintaining Australia as the worlds biggest exporter of gas and coal, and by a Federal Labor spokesperson who extols the virtues of coal.
Consequently the National Cabinet may encounter many dangers. One can imagine the energy leadership allocated to a Queensland Energy Minister with expert advice from the Chair of the NCCC!
Sustainability and adaptation
Most nations including Australia have given scant indication of action necessary to save humanity from a two degree rise in temperature. Indeed a likely three degrees or more this century is predicted in the study The Third Degree.
Each year of inaction makes it more and more difficult to avoid the dire consequences
Currently Australia has no national adaptation policy, it remains largely the province of the states; some are active, others do little.
Building on the findings soon to come from the Bushfire Royal Commission the National Cabinet and its reform committees should detail their actions and needs for coordination and national disaster intervention. They must address national water policy, new environmental laws based on scientific advice, planning for resilient housing and infrastructure, all encompassed into a strategy of rejuvenation of manufacturing and regional resurgence. This will provide the basis for national adaptation policy.
Under likely climate change scenarios, a rising proportion of jobs will be required to alleviate and repair damage from increasing storms, flood, sea level rise, bushfires and drought. We need to start now.
Essentially an adaptation policy will attempt to maintain a sustainable environment and infrastructure to create a viable future and each of the six subcommittees would have a role.
Sustainability is currently under review of the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act. Government has not yet recognised that the sustainability of Australia is at stake when it cries cut green tape and considers devolving more regulation to states with little competence to manage it. In fact the forthcoming Samuel Report will determine the future of a threatened environment and the health considerations closely linked to it.
The EPBC Act should become The Environmental Sustainability and Human Health Act.
Aboriginal social disadvantage
‘Silence is violence. Complacency is complicity’
All of us are complicit in failures to address the social disadvantage of the Aboriginal people.
The national cabinet is the appropriate forum to continue discussing the forthcoming revised national closing the gap agreement established in 2008 to improve Indigenous health, education and employment.
Within the job creation intent, the failures of the targets will be helped greatly by initiatives on social housing for a home is fundamental to their delivery. Indeed this is a crying need for thousands of homeless regardless of race and social housing based on UN sustainable development goals offers more opportunity for jobs than the middleclass welfare- house improvement initiative.
Concluding Thoughts
Many writers have linked these crises with values in Western society. An article in the Sierra Club national magazine confronts us with the title Racism is killing the Planet
You cant have climate change without sacrifice zones, and you cant have sacrifice zones without disposable people, and you can’t have disposable people without racism.
Were in this global environmental mess because we have declared parts of our planet to be disposable… The neighborhoods near where I live in Los Angeles, surrounded by urban oilfields, are considered disposable. The very atmosphere is considered disposable. When we pollute.. thats a way of saying that the placeand the people and all the other life that calls that place homeare of no value.
In Australia the value judgement commenced 250 years ago when Cook set foot in an environment that had bee sustainable for 46,000 years of Aboriginal habitation.
The crises are also linked to abject failures of democratic governance. In the US, Brazil and some other countries we see democratically elected leaders complicit in destroying both environment and sections of the community.
Democracy cannot solve todays complex problem unless we are able to reform it to embrace both expert opinion and care for all humanity.
Dr David Shearman AM FRACP is Emeritus Professor of Medicine at Adelaide University

David Shearman
David Shearman is Emeritus Professor of Medicine at Adelaide University and previously held senior academic positions at Edinburgh University, where he qualified in Medicine and Biological Science, and at Yale University. He is author of many books on climate change and related issues. He has served on the IPCC, has been President of the Conservation Council of South Australia. With the late Professor Tony McMichael he founded Doctors for the Environment Australia in 2001. He is author and co-author of several hundred scientific and medical papers.