Senator WATT (Queensland—Minister for the Environment and Water) (14:21): Thanks, Senator Whish-Wilson. I am aware of those reports and I saw them reported, I think, last week. I think all Australians, I would hope, would be very concerned about those developments when it comes to the Antarctic. We are seeing very worrying signs about the impact of climate change on Antarctica as we are seeing similar signs evidenced on the environment generally in Australia and the world as a whole. I'm sure Senator Whish-Wilson, as a Tasmanian senator, is well aware of the investment that the government continues to make in Antarctic research and in funding programs to do with Antarctica; but, again, the evidence that we are seeing highlights again the need for us to continue taking action on climate change both as a country and as a globe. I recognise that Senator Whish-Wilson probably doesn't support the actions that our government is taking, but the reality is that this is the first government that Australia has had for a very long time that has taken climate change action seriously. It's why we increased the targets on emissions. It's why we've managed to reduce emissions. Senator Canavan: Emissions are up—so are power prices. Senator WATT: I see Senator Canavan perpetuating the falsehood that other members of his party have been perpetuating this week by claiming that emissions are going up or actually are flatlining when actually the facts, something that Senator Canavan is never keen to recognise, show that Australia is tracking well to meet our 2030 climate pollution target, with new quarterly emissions data showing that emissions fell by 6.5 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent in the year to March 2025. I know it doesn't really suit Senator Canavan and all the other guests on 'Sky after dark' to actually talk about facts, data and evidence about climate emissions, but our policies are bringing them down, and we want to do more. The PRESIDENT: Senator Whish-Wilson, first supplementary?