“Mr Kean understands the opportunity that the transition to clean energy represents for our nation. He understood it as a member of the NSW government,and he understands it as someone who has focused his working life in recent years on making a difference,not just today,but for generations to come,” Albanese said.
Kean’s appointment is a major development in the federal energy debate,given the former NSW deputy Liberal leader pushed his government to adopt the most ambitious climate change and renewable energy policies in Australia.
It will allow Labor to point to Liberal support for its renewables rollout as federal Coalition leader Peter Dutton reignites the country’s climate wars by promising toscrap the government’s legislated 2030 emissions reduction target andbuild seven nuclear power plants by 2050.
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Kean will head the Climate Change Authority as it provides advice to the Albanese government on its 2035 emissions targets,meaning any criticism from the federal opposition will be seen as an attempt to discredit a recommendation from the senior Liberal MP.
Kean has also been a strident critic of any move to slow the rollout of renewable energy,and has advocated against measures to boost fossil fuels – two issues the federal Coalition has thrown its weight behind.
Federal Energy Minister Chris Bowen said Kean could help to unite Australians asnew polling shows voters are split on nuclear power but strongly support renewables. Bowen said Kean’s time in public office had been marked by major reform and “the ability to bring people from across the political spectrum with him for the good of the community”.