Australia prime minister moves to repeal climate tax

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AGAINST CARBON TAX. In this file photo, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott speaks to the media in front of the Bali bombing memorial after laying a wreath at the memorial to those killed in the 2002 Bali bombing, in Kuta, Bali, Indonesia, 09 October 2013. EPA/Made Nagi

Australia’s new conservative Prime Minister Tony Abbott Wednesday, November 13, moved to abolish a carbon tax designed to combat climate change as his first major economic reform since taking office. The carbon tax charged the country’s biggest polluters for their emissions at a fixed price and was due to transition to an emissions trading scheme. Scrapping the tax was a central election promise of Abbott who had argued the cost of the levy was passed on to consumers, resulting in higher utility bills and day-to-day costs. The new government instead favors a “direct action” plan that includes an incentive fund to pay companies to increase their energy efficiency, a controversial sequestration of carbon in soil scheme, and the planting 20 million trees.

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