Professor Ross Garnaut's portrayal of the urgency of climate change does not match his support for a slow start to emissions trading and incremental economic change, according to Australian Greens climate change spokesperson, Senator Christine Milne.
Senator Milne says there is a "serious mismatch" between Prof Garnaut's understanding of the urgency of the issue and the "cautious and incrementalist policy prescriptions".
"Garnaut's warning that delay is not an option is completely disingenuous in the context of his recommendation of a slow start to the scheme, capping the price of carbon before 2012 and not seeking to go beyond Australia's pitiful commitment in Kyoto's first phase," Sen Milne said.
"If we are to have a real chance of avoiding catastrophic, runaway climate change, we will need rapid, transformative policies to build a new post-carbon economy, not ad hoc, incremental change that prioritises increasing our wealth over protecting our future.
"The sooner we build new zero-carbon infrastructure, the sooner the costs will come down.
"It makes both economic and environmental sense to seize this opportunity to rebuild Australia's manufacturing sector for a green collar revolution, investing in a huge expansion of education and training.
"This opportunity puts paid to the doom and gloom foreshadowed for the Hunter and Latrobe Valleys as long as the Government provides structural adjustment assistance to help transition to the new economy rather than trying to shore up coal."
However, the Greens have backed Prof Garnaut on many of his design positions, including his support for 100pc auctioning of permits, for immediate broad coverage including all energy, industrial emissions and transport, and for the appropriate use of complementary measures such as mandatory renewable energy targets and feed-in tariffs.
"On the vexed issue of compensation, Professor Garnaut's focus on equity, and supporting low income Australians well ahead of industry, is pleasing," Sen Milne said.
"However, we would like to see more of this compensation in the form of investment in energy efficiency rather than welfare payments."