Net Zero Economy Authority Bill 2024 - Second Reading - Agree with the bill's main idea
Passed by a small majority
No rebellions 93% attendance
Division last edited 7th Aug 2024 by mackay staff
The majority voted in favour of a motion to agree with the bill, as amended.
According to the bills digest:
The [Net Zero Economy Authority Bill 2024 (NZEA Bill)] will establish the Net Zero Economy Authority (NZEA), which will provide advice, education, and coordination relating to Australia’s transition to a net zero emissions economy.
The Bill does not include any power to order the closure of coal- or gas-fired power stations.
The Bills’ most substantive provision is the Energy Industry Jobs Plan (the Plan) in Part 5, which is a structural adjustment framework for the workforce transition that occurs after an owner/operator announces their intention to close a coal-fired or gas-fired power station. The Plan also covers the workforce of ‘dependent employers’ such as coal mines (if they provide coal to generate electricity at a coal-fired power station that is closing), and other suppliers.
The NZEA’s CEO and the Fair Work Commission (FWC) have pre-eminent roles in the Plan.
The mechanisms for the Plan will include:
consultations with relevant employers, employees and employee organisations
carrots and sticks (grants, and FWC determinations and orders) and
advice at various junctures from a Stakeholder Panel and an Energy Industry Worker Redeployment Advisory Group (EIWRAG).
The Explanatory Memorandum indicates that costs associated with the Plan have not been fully identified at this stage.
The Explanatory Memorandum provides information about the NZEA’s likely running costs but also notes that ‘departmental and administered costs associated with the Plan’s implementation and operation’ are not available at this stage. The NZEA Bill foreshadows the provision of funding or grants to workers and/or their employers, but the Bill and Explanatory Memorandum are silent on specific mechanisms and likely costs.
The NZEA Bill will give the FWC additional responsibilities in relation to the Plan but will not make any changes to the Fair Work Act 2009 as the Plan is intended to work within the existing industrial relations framework. However, the Explanatory Memorandum is silent on funding implications for the FWC of these additional responsibilities.
Nobody rebelled against their party.
Party | Votes | |
---|---|---|
Australian Greens (100% turnout) | 4 Yes – 0 No | |
Adam Bandt Melbourne | Yes | |
Stephen Bates Brisbane | Yes | |
Max Chandler-Mather Griffith | Yes | |
Elizabeth Watson-Brown Ryan | Yes | |
Australian Labor Party (92% turnout) | 71 Yes – 0 No | |
Anthony Albanese Grayndler | Yes | |
Anne Aly Cowan | Yes | |
Michelle Ananda-Rajah Higgins | Yes | |
Jodie Belyea Dunkley | Yes | |
Chris Bowen McMahon | Yes | |
Tony Burke Watson | Yes | |
Matt Burnell Spence | Yes | |
Linda Burney Barton | Yes | |
Josh Burns Macnamara | Yes | |
Mark Butler Hindmarsh | Yes | |
Alison Byrnes Cunningham | Yes | |
Jim Chalmers Rankin | Yes | |
Andrew Charlton Parramatta | Yes | |
Lisa Chesters Bendigo | Yes | |
Jason Clare Blaxland | Yes | |
Sharon Claydon Newcastle | Yes | |
Libby Coker Corangamite | Yes | |
Julie Collins Franklin | Yes | |
Pat Conroy Shortland | Yes | |
Mary Doyle Aston | Yes | |
Mark Dreyfus Isaacs | Yes | |
Justine Elliot Richmond | Yes | |
Cassandra Fernando Holt | Yes | |
Mike Freelander Macarthur | Yes | |
Steve Georganas Adelaide | Yes | |
Andrew Giles Scullin | Yes | |
Patrick Gorman Perth | Yes | |
Luke Gosling Solomon | Yes | |
Julian Hill Bruce | Yes | |
Stephen Jones Whitlam | Yes | |
Ged Kearney Cooper | Yes | |
Matt Keogh Burt | Yes | |
Peter Khalil Wills | Yes | |
Catherine King Ballarat | Yes | |
Madeleine King Brand | Yes | |
Tania Lawrence Hasluck | Yes | |
Jerome Laxale Bennelong | Yes | |
Andrew Leigh Fenner | Yes | |
Sam Lim Tangney | Yes | |
Richard Marles Corio | Yes | |
Zaneta Mascarenhas Swan | Yes | |
Kristy McBain Eden-Monaro | Yes | |
Louise Miller-Frost Boothby | Yes | |
Brian Mitchell Lyons | Yes | |
Rob Mitchell McEwen | Yes | |
Daniel Mulino Fraser | Yes | |
Shayne Neumann Blair | Yes | |
Brendan O'Connor Gorton | Yes | |
Clare O'Neil Hotham | Yes | |
Alicia Payne Canberra | Yes | |
Graham Perrett Moreton | Yes | |
Tanya Plibersek Sydney | Yes | |
Sam Rae Hawke | Yes | |
Gordon Reid Robertson | Yes | |
Amanda Rishworth Kingston | Yes | |
Tracey Roberts Pearce | Yes | |
Michelle Rowland Greenway | Yes | |
Joanne Ryan Lalor | Yes | |
Marion Scrymgour Lingiari | Yes | |
Bill Shorten Maribyrnong | Yes | |
Sally Sitou Reid | Yes | |
David Smith Bean | Yes | |
Anne Stanley Werriwa | Yes | |
Meryl Swanson Paterson | Yes | |
Susan Templeman Macquarie | Yes | |
Kate Thwaites Jagajaga | Yes | |
Maria Vamvakinou Calwell | Yes | |
Tim Watts Gellibrand | Yes | |
Anika Wells Lilley | Yes | |
Josh Wilson Fremantle | Yes | |
Tony Zappia Makin | Yes | |
Carina Garland Chisholm | Absent | |
Ed Husic Chifley | Absent | |
Emma McBride Dobell | Absent | |
Fiona Phillips Gilmore | Absent | |
Dan Repacholi Hunter | Absent | |
Matt Thistlethwaite Kingsford Smith | Absent | |
Rebekha Sharkie Mayo Centre Alliance | Absent | |
Mark Coulton Parkes Deputy Speaker | No | |
Kate Chaney Curtin Independent | Yes | |
Zoe Daniel Goldstein Independent | Yes | |
Helen Haines Indi Independent | Yes | |
Allegra Spender Wentworth Independent | Yes | |
Zali Steggall Warringah Independent | Yes | |
Kylea Tink North Sydney Independent | Yes | |
Andrew Wilkie Clark Independent | Yes | |
Russell Broadbent Monash Independent | Absent | |
Andrew Gee Calare Independent | Absent | |
Dai Le Fowler Independent | Absent | |
Monique Ryan Kooyong Independent | Absent | |
Sophie Scamps Mackellar Independent | Absent | |
Bob Katter Kennedy Katter's Australian Party | Absent | |
Liberal National Party (100% turnout) | 0 Yes – 9 No | |
Angie Bell Moncrieff | No | |
Colin Boyce Flynn | No | |
Cameron Caldwell Fadden | No | |
Garth Hamilton Groom | No | |
Henry Pike Bowman | No | |
Phillip Thompson Herbert | No | |
Andrew Wallace Fisher | No | |
Andrew Willcox Dawson | No | |
Terry Young Longman | No | |
Liberal Party (97% turnout) | 0 Yes – 32 No | |
Karen Andrews McPherson | No | |
Scott Buchholz Wright | No | |
David Coleman Banks | No | |
Peter Dutton Dickson | No | |
Warren Entsch Leichhardt | No | |
Paul Fletcher Bradfield | No | |
Ian Goodenough Moore | No | |
Andrew Hastie Canning | No | |
Alex Hawke Mitchell | No | |
Luke Howarth Petrie | No | |
Simon Kennedy Cook | No | |
Julian Leeser Berowra | No | |
Sussan Ley Farrer | No | |
Nola Marino Forrest | No | |
Melissa McIntosh Lindsay | No | |
Zoe McKenzie Flinders | No | |
Ted O'Brien Fairfax | No | |
Tony Pasin Barker | No | |
Gavin Pearce Braddon | No | |
Melissa Price Durack | No | |
Rowan Ramsey Grey | No | |
James Stevens Sturt | No | |
Michael Sukkar Deakin | No | |
Angus Taylor Hume | No | |
Dan Tehan Wannon | No | |
Bert Van Manen Forde | No | |
Ross Vasta Bonner | No | |
Aaron Violi Casey | No | |
Jenny Ware Hughes | No | |
Rick Wilson O'Connor | No | |
Keith Wolahan Menzies | No | |
Jason Wood La Trobe | No | |
Bridget Archer Bass | Absent | |
National Party (75% turnout) | 0 Yes – 9 No | |
Darren Chester Gippsland | No | |
David Gillespie Lyne | No | |
Kevin Hogan Page | No | |
Michelle Landry Capricornia | No | |
David Littleproud Maranoa | No | |
Michael McCormack Riverina | No | |
Llew O'Brien Wide Bay | No | |
Keith Pitt Hinkler | No | |
Anne Webster Mallee | No | |
Sam Birrell Nicholls | Absent | |
Pat Conaghan Cowper | Absent | |
Barnaby Joyce New England | Absent | |
Milton Dick Oxley Speaker | Absent | |
Totals (88% turnout) | 82 Yes – 51 No |
Turnout is the percentage of members eligible to vote that did vote.