Mr HUNT (Flinders—Minister for the Environment) (15:07): I thank the member for Braddon for that question and I congratulate him on his community 'cuppers'; I understand that they are popular and well attended. I want to deal with the announcement today, but before doing that I might do something unusual and invite the Leader of the Opposition to table the document he was holding before. I have a suspicion it might be an outdated set of projections, because today we released a new set of projections and those projections show a reduction of 264 million tonnes—264 million tonnes in net abatement—compared with what was put out in our March projections. So the invitation is there: table the very thing that you seemed to be quoting from before— Mr Albanese: You said no! Mr HUNT: because I think those opposite have wilfully, deliberately used a set of figures in this House whilst knowing that it was outdated. What a shabby, shameless bunch of charlatans these folks are—a shabby, shameless bunch of charlatans. Table the document. Come on. Give us the material. If you are confident, you should not have a problem with tabling them. But I think, Prime Minister, that they are knowingly using outdated material. Mr Albanese: Mr Speaker— The SPEAKER: The minister will resume his seat. Mr HUNT: Have you got the document? Come on. The SPEAKER: The minister does not have the call. Mr Mitchell interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for McEwen has already been warned. Mr HUNT: This is a bit embarrassing, hey, Albo? The SPEAKER: The Minister for the Environment will cease interjecting. The member for McEwen has already been warned. It is late in question time, but not too late. The member for Grayndler— Mr Albanese: Mr Speaker— The SPEAKER: on a point of order? Mr Albanese: Indeed—and I rise in defence of you, Mr Speaker. The SPEAKER: On a point of order? Mr Albanese: Yes, on a point of order. The minister keeps conveying the idea that you have to take certain action, Mr Speaker. The SPEAKER: The member for Grayndler will resume his seat. Mr Albanese: And I am very concerned— The SPEAKER: The member for Grayndler does not have the call. Mr Hunt interjecting— The SPEAKER: I have not called the minister yet. Mr Hunt interjecting— The SPEAKER: Minister, I have not called you yet! The minister will refer to people by their correct titles. The minister has the call. Mr HUNT: Thank you, Mr Speaker—and it is always a pleasure to address you appropriately. As for those opposite, what a shabby, shameless bunch of charlatans. I say that because these are the people who wanted to table the document just a few minutes ago, but it seems they have been found out— Opposition members: You said no! Mr HUNT: Well, I am inviting you: go ahead and do it. The opposition are using documentation that is outdated, which today has been updated and shows a reduction over and above that which had already been shown, by an additional 264 million tonnes. Where does that come from? There is 10 million tonnes in additional abatement from the renewable energy target bipartisan agreement; 140 million tonnes from write-downs against business as usual; 92 million tonnes from the first two auctions of the Emissions Reduction Fund; and, on top of that, another 22 million tonnes from the agreement with the Landfill Owners Association. Those opposite will not table the very document that they said was vital to present to this House, because they have been caught out bodgying up the figures. They have trumped up the numbers. At the end of the day, we are going to meet our targets, we are going to beat our targets and we are going to go to Paris and achieve a global agreement. And I will table our updated figures today. Mr Turnbull: After that detailed, diligent and dazzling answer, I ask that further questions be placed on the Notice Paper.