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Nationals back net zero, with safeguards

Colin Brinsden and Paul OsborneAAP
Nationals leaders are discussing emissions targets ahead of Scott Morrison's trip to Glasgow.
Camera IconNationals leaders are discussing emissions targets ahead of Scott Morrison's trip to Glasgow. Credit: AAP

Prime Minister Scott Morrison will take a net zero by 2050 target to the Glasgow climate talks.

Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce told reporters on Sunday his party supported a "process" to get to net zero emissions by 2050.

Mr Joyce said he expected there to be a "firm commitment" to regional Australia in a submission which would go to cabinet this week, before Mr Morrison heads overseas on Thursday.

"The position regional people are in now is better than the terms and the process that was initially delivered to us," he said after a partyroom meeting in Canberra which lasted just over two hours.

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"We are in support of a process going forward that would go towards a 2050 emissions target.

"Obviously that depends upon what we see in the cabinet submission reflecting the conversations and agreements between myself and the prime minister."

Apart from a "socio-economic safety valve" which would include regular reviews of the impacts of the emissions target on jobs and industries in rural and regional areas, a key factor in getting the Nationals over the line was the prospect of an election loss without a net zero target.

"Standing up for them (regional Australians) is making sure that you are in the (cabinet) room where the decisions are being made," the deputy prime minister said.

"Heroics that have no outcome, heroics that leave nothing but a rhetorical flourish - but leave the person who is hurting in the same position as what they were - is not an outcome the Nationals party room supported."

He declined to say whether the prime minister had agreed during the negotiations to give the Nationals an extra cabinet position.

No deal with the Nationals could have been a major embarrassment for the prime minister heading to Glasgow and to the polls by May, with climate shaping up as a major issue for voters.

Mr Joyce acknowledged many Nationals supporters held a different position and continued to have concerns about the target.

"But for all those people in regional Australia ... we will be going into bat for them as we always do."

Nationals deputy leader David Littleproud said it was important that Australia faced up to its international commitments but also made sure there were safeguards.

"The technology roadmap that (Energy Minister) Angus Taylor has put together gives us comfort around where that can take us and particularly around protecting existing jobs and how that technology can grow regional jobs," he said.

Nationals Senate leader Bridget McKenzie said climate policy had been a "totemic issue" for the party over many years and she was glad the party room had "respectfully come to a decision".

Mr Joyce declined to go into detail about the cabinet submission.

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese said it was extraordinary Mr Morrison was not in the room where decisions were being made about Australia's economic and environmental future.

"This is a government that is frozen in time while the world warms around. This is not really a government, more like a rabble," he told reporters in Canberra.

Liberal frontbencher Alan Tudge dismissed the suggestion the government's junior partner is deciding policy.

"They quite rightly have their own party room. They can debate these issues."

Earlier, NSW Treasurer Matt Kean said Nationals ministers would need to resign if they did not support the prime minister.

Mr Kean said a global "economic arms race" was under way in terms of the next generation of clean energy jobs, investment and exports.

He the federal government should also upgrade its 2030 emissions target if it was to be taken seriously.

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