00:00The thing that gets to me is the fact that I don't believe that humans can rectify climate change.
00:12It doesn't mean really much to me. I don't know.
00:16This is crucial, I think, for limiting the severity of climate change impacts like extreme weather.
00:21If we don't, the flooding we've seen recently in the Hunter, the Mid-North Coast,
00:25these one-in-100-year floods that are occurring every few years,
00:30they'll keep happening and with greater frequency and severity.
00:34I don't think that there's anything that we can do to necessarily stop climate change.
00:38I reckon we could probably help it, but I think that's just the way the world works.
00:43Net zero, I'm not really sure what that is. I'm going to have to Google it.
00:47Making sure that we're using the right type of fuel, electricity.
00:52I think that's great, but the earlier the better. I'm not sure if they should be waiting until 2050 to do it.
00:58It's a waste of time, a waste of money. It's just going to put power bills through the roof.
01:03I'm sort of against it because there's not enough sunlight anywhere in the world to keep the whole power grid going.
01:11It's a waste of time. Windmills cost more to make and after 50 years they're buggered.
01:17Having said all that, us living here in Tasmania, we're quite lucky we're having hydropower,
01:23which is very good and clean power.
01:26Oh well, I know that it's an aspirational aim to bring down the amount of energy that we're producing
01:39to be the same as the amount of energy that we're using.
01:43The question is, what does net zero mean to you?
01:46What's net zero?
01:49I think that's pretty much perfect.
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