Mark Diesendorf

A woman with sunglasses on smiles as she leaves for the day

Working and producing less to reduce humanity’s carbon footprint is part of a growing movement towards a ‘degrowth’ economy.

wind turbines in the countryside

Key to success will be transitioning to an ecologically sustainable economy, with greener technologies and industries.

power pylons at sunset

New research shows that a transition to renewable energy alone is not fast enough to keep global temperatures below 2050 target levels.

Wind and solar energy farm

The government's latest energy plans are a failure of logic, and will lock in fossil fuel use for decades.

Wind turbines

New UNSW research has disproved the claim that the transition to renewable electricity systems will harm the global economy.

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Labor's policies have to get a lot more ambitious if they want to see real reductions in emissions.

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Twelve power projects are in the running for federal government dollars: six pumped hydro, five gas and one coal. It's clear which one shouldn't be on the list, for economic and environmental reasons.

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Here are some short- and medium-term strategies for transitioning to renewable, reliable and affordable energy in South Australia, writes Mark Diesendorf.

Nuclear power

The South Australian royal commission recommended the state investigate a high-level nuclear storage facility. But the costs don't stack up, writes Mark Diesendorf.

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The climate action movement can learn from Ghandi and Martin Luther-King as they look for new ways to force governments to take stronger action on climate change, writes Mark Diesendorf.

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