Skip to main content

The votes are in!

Although the tally room madness won’t officially kick off until Saturday afternoon, here at Oxfam we’ve added up the votes of more than 4,000 Australians who have so far voted in our climate survey.

Whatever way you look at the numbers, it is clear that Australians are tired of the hot air coming out of the major parties on climate change. They want real solutions.

The top three climate policies our 4,000 plus voters are calling for are:

  • more investment in renewable energy,
  • big polluters to be held responsible, and
  • the Australian government should show leadership on an international level and work hard to get a fair ambitious and binding global climate agreement .

You and I know that there are a lot of reasons to act. Developing countries face a growing climate crisis. And here in Australia there are huge economic opportunities from early action to develop a renewable energy industry.

So that’s why we’ve taken your votes, your voices, and sent letters to PM Julia Gillard, Opposition Leader Tony Abbott, Climate Change Minister Penny Wong and Opposition Spokesperson on Climate Change Greg Hunt reflecting our collective disappointment in their climate policies and calling on their parties to act, and act early in the next term of government.

We’re not going to pretend otherwise: whichever major party gets in this weekend we will still have a long way to go. But here at Oxfam we know that Australians like you will not let up until you get real action on climate change.

Thank you for campaigning with Oxfam – together change is possible.

The votes are still coming in; check out the up-to-date counter
Read more about our climate change work

Read more blogs

South Sudan: Shaima Ali, a refugee and mother of four who is among Oxfam cash assistant program participant sitted outside her home feeding her daughter Fahima in Renk, South Sudan. Photo: Herison Philip Osfaldo/Oxfam

The East Africa Food Crisis: Understanding the Causes, Impacts and Response

The East Africa food crisis is one of the most urgent and complex humanitarian challenges in the world today. Right now, more than 56 million people across the region are...

Read more
Mekko, Indonesia: Said (33) stands in front of his fishing boat. He now struggles to catch enough fish for his family's daily needs, due to climate change and the fish moving further and further out to sea. Oxfam acknowledges the support of the Australian Government through the Australian NGO Cooperation Program (ANCP). Photo: Vikram Sombu/Oxfam

What Is Climate Change? What You Can Do to Help

Climate change refers to long-term shifts in temperature, rainfall, wind and other elements of the Earth’s climate system. The climate has always changed over time. But what we’re seeing today...

Read more
Bangladesh: Mst. Doulotunnesa's community has been severely impacted by climate change, with increasingly high temperatures and increasing levels of salinity in the water. Mst Doulotunnesa, along with other women from the community, attended training sessions by Oxfam partner organisation, Breaking the Silence. This training covered climate change, gender equality and women's empowerment. Photo: Fabeha Monir/Oxfam.

A revolutionary new tool measuring the costs of climate change in Bangladesh

Communities in low-income countries feel the impacts of climate change more than anyone — and those impacts are not always obvious from the outside.   Alongside the destruction and devastation...

Read more