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Australia Advised to Cut Carbon Emissions by 30% by 2025

© AP Photo / Rob GriffithIn this photo taken Friday, July 8, 2011, smoke bellows from a chimney stack at BlueScope Steel's steelworks at Port Kembla, south of Sydney, Australia
In this photo taken Friday, July 8, 2011, smoke bellows from a chimney stack at BlueScope Steel's steelworks at Port Kembla, south of Sydney, Australia - Sputnik International
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Australia’s emissions-intensive economy should decrease carbon emissions by 30 percent by 2025 in order to help achieve the internationally agreed goal of avoiding global warming, the Climate Change Authority (CCA) said Thursday.

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MOSCOW (Sputnik) The Australian statutory agency’s advice, aimed at aiding the government to meet national emissions targets, comes ahead of the UN Climate Change Conference in Paris in December. The event will potentially conclude with the signing of a global agreement on climate change, introducing a legally binding and universal deal on climate for all nations of the world.

According to the CCA, Australia needs to sign up for carbon emissions cuts by 30 percent by 2025 and forty to sixty percent by 2030 in order to be on a par with other UN members in attempting to reduce the consequences of global warming.

"The authority believes its recommendations constitute a credible package for the Australian government to take to the Paris conference. Achievement of the recommended target of a 30% reduction in emissions by 2025 would still have Australia with a more emissions-intensive economy than any major developed country other than Canada," the CCA said in its final report on emissions reduction targets.

However, climate groups voiced concerns as to whether the targets recommended by the CCA were realistic as they could be a weight on Australia and its emissions-intensive economy.

In response to the agency’s report, Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop told the channel Sky News that the government’s final decision on post-2020 emissions targets would be "economically responsible, proportionate and appropriate for Australia".

According to the CCA, Australia’s carbon emissions intensity reduced by half between 1990 and 2012 following structural changes, new low-carbon technologies, fuel switching and improvements in energy efficiency.

The largest carbon emitters on the planet, the United States and China, intend to decrease their carbon emissions by 28 percent by 2025 and about 20 percent by 2030 respectively.

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