Mr MORRISON (Cook—Prime Minister and Minister for the Public Service) (14:28): I refer the member to the answer by the Minister for Energy and Emissions Reduction, which spelt out very clearly what the government has signed up to in terms of the Paris Agreement. I'm asked about the Paris Agreement, and our commitment is 26 per cent reduction in emissions over 2005. I'm pleased to tell the House that, as of the most recent report, that is now down by 13.1 per cent, which means we're half the way there. And we have a plan to meet the 2030 commitment. The only problem is that when I look at what those opposite are talking about, they have no idea what they want to commit to for 2030. They say, 'Well, I don't know whether I'll tell you before the election or I won't.' They want to talk about things 30 years from now; they can't even agree on what they want to do 10 years from now! When we were in opposition, we set out a 10-year plan. Ms Murphy interjecting— Mr Conroy interjecting— Mr Giles interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister will resume his seat. The member for Dunkley is warned, as is the member for Shortland. If the Leader of the Opposition would just bear with me a second, I'll get a few of these warnings down. The member for Scullin will cease interjecting. The Leader of the Opposition, I guess on a point of order. Mr Albanese: You guessed correctly, Mr Speaker. The SPEAKER: No—just state the point of order. Mr Albanese: It's on relevance. He hasn't mentioned Gladys Berejiklian once and her commitment to net zero— The SPEAKER: The Leader of the Opposition will resume his seat. As he well knows, the Prime Minister is not compelled to mention anyone by name, particularly if the name wasn't in the question. Mr Albanese interjecting— The SPEAKER: Yes, that's right. The Prime Minister has the call. Mr MORRISON: I'm asked about the Paris Agreement and I'm asked about a 2050 zero-carbon commitment. I'll tell you what, on this side of the House—because this is what we took to the Australian people—we said we'd hit a 26 per cent reduction by 2030. We have a clear plan to achieve that. Those opposite won't even tell you what their 2030 commitment is, because of the Otis group. And now we've got the Milo group, which I assume has been established to counteract the Otis group, and they put a big slap-down on the Otis group with the ill-timed and ill-prepared commitment which the Leader of the Opposition made on the weekend. What I do know is this: Australians will always pay the price for Labor's ill-considered decisions. They will pay the price of a plan that doesn't even exist for 2050. They can't even tell you what they would do 10 years from now, so how could you believe anything they say about what would happen 30 years from now? This is a classic example of the Labor leader trying to have it both ways. He won't tell you what's happening in 2030; he wants to tell you what's happening in 2050. There are no details, there's no plan, there's no specificity. He just says, 'Trust us. We're Labor.' Well, the last time the Australian people trusted Labor when it came to climate, they said there wouldn't be a carbon tax and then they delivered a carbon tax, breaking their promise. I'll tell you what I won't do: I'm not going to make a promise to Australians; I'm not going to put a tax on them to get emissions down; I'm not going to take away their jobs in the way that the Leader of the Opposition wants to do. Ms Coker interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Corangamite is warned! Mr MORRISON: I'm not going to turn my back on workers in rural and regional Australia, who depend on the commitments that we've made. I'm not going to jack their electricity prices up in the way they doubled under the Labor government. They doubled under the Labor government; electricity prices have fallen 3½ per cent as a result of the policies that we put in place. You can't trust Labor on climate— (Time expired)