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News live: Chris Bowen travels to Pacific for Cop31 push; report finds older Australians support tax hike for high super balances


Bowen travels to Pacific in push to host Cop31

Krishani dhanji

While there’s no confirmation of who will host Cop31 next year, climate change and energy minister Chris Bowen will travel to the Pacific this week to discuss Australia’s joint bid with the region to host the climate summit.

Australia is lobbying to host the summit against Turkey, and Anthony Albanese promised during the federal election campaign to hold the summit – if we won – in Adelaide.

Bowen will visit Tuvalu, Palau, Samoa and the Marshall Islands and says the trip will help deepen ties with the region.

It makes sense that the world’s biggest climate conference should be hosted by the region facing some of the world’s biggest climate impacts.

Australia and the Pacific’s joint bid for COP31 is about ensuring that the region’s voice shapes global climate action for the benefit of the Australian and Pacific people.

South Australia’s acting premier, Susan Close, says her state is a “global leader” in decarbonisation, with 75% of its energy coming from renewables, and a target of net 100% renewables by 2027.

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Chairman of the Anti-Defamation Commission Dvir Abramovich says the Jewish community is “not okay” after a spate of alleged antisemitic attacks in Melbourne at the weekend.

Speaking to ABC’s Radio National this morning, Abramovich said antisemitism was “not just an abstract issue, it’s a real-life threat to our lives and to Jewish life here”.

I need Australians to really hear that: if ever there was a moment to break the glass and pull the alarm label never again, it’s right now because what happened on Friday night wasn’t some isolated outburst, it was the boiling point of something that’s been building for years now, since October 7.

Abramovich said he went to the East Melbourne Synagogue on Saturday to see the doorway after the fire and “something broke in me”.

And there’s a prevailing feeling in our community that something is cracked. And we’re not sure who’s going to protect us.

He commended strong condemnation from Anthony Albanese, the home affairs minister, Tony Burke, and the former attorney-general Mark Dreyfus at the weekend but called for strong action, including state and federal hate crime task forces and national anti-vilification education.

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