Key events
Littleproud says Nationals do not reject climate change
David Littleproud, the Nationals leader, rejected Bowen’s assertion in an interview with RN Breakfast, saying:
I believe in climate change. I believe that man has made an impact on climate change. Just because I don’t believe in Chris Bowen’s plan doesn’t mean I’m a climate denier. …
We believe there’s ways to do it, but not necessarily Labor’s way.
Littleproud said he remained concerned about the cost behind the plan to lower emissions, adding the Nationals were working on their own effort to ensure “we’ve adapted to climate change and protected our economy”.
What I intend to do is lead a party that will maturely work through this, look through all aspects of this, and say to the Australian people: we believe in climate change, but there is ways to achieve this, and it’s not just one way to achieve it.
Open your minds, have the conversation.
Bowen says the Coalition ‘doesn’t believe in climate action’
Bowen was asked about the Coalition’s fierce criticism of the target. The opposition leader, Sussan Ley, yesterday said the targets failed on both counts of cost and credibility. Bowen said of those criticisms:
The Coalition doesn’t believe in climate action. There’s no surprise there, nor do they accept climate science. [These] guys are just on the wrong side of modernity and they will always play that cheap politics. …
I think Australians know better than that and see through that climate denial sort of rhetoric.
Bowen says emissions reduction targets ‘no small thing’
Chris Bowen, the climate change minister, maintained the government’s emissions reduction target was “no small thing”, saying he believes the plan is achievable “but ambitious”.
Bowen spoke to RN Breakfast this morning, addressing criticism from many in the environmental community that the target of a reduction between 62% and 70% by 2035 over 2005 levels was too low to rein in the worst effects of climate change. Bowen said:
This is no small thing … And it certainly compares well internationally. Over the last 24 hours, Europe’s been considering a 63% to 70% cut, which shows on the same accounting basis as ours. So, that shows that we are right up there with the most ambitious countries in the world, as we should be, as we need to be. But also … it has to be achievable. …
With all due respect to those commentators who say we should be doing more, they don’t need to deliver – government does and the government has set out yesterday not only a target but a comprehensive plan to help us get there.
Nick Visser
Good morning, Nick Visser here to take over for Martin Farrer. Let’s get to it, and happy Friday!
Julie Bishop denies bullying allegations in Senate inquiry

Krishani Dhanji
Julie Bishop has categorically denied allegations of bullying made against her during a Senate inquiry, issuing a 25 page right of reply, published on the Senate committee’s website.
The ANU chancellor had told the media and staff at a town hall meeting last week that she denied the allegations and she had first heard the allegations when they were aired at the inquiry.
Liz Allen, an demographer at the ANU, made the allegations while giving evidence to a committee investigating higher education governance.
In the letter, Bishop said the way the allegations were made raised “grave concerns”.
The way the hearing … was used to ventilate serious allegations against me and other senior ANU officers raises grave concerns for a range of reasons – both individually and for the ANU.
I wish to state on the record that I categorically deny the allegations levelled against me during the hearing on 12 August 2025.
I cannot in good conscience publicly give testimony to the committee that may further compromise the workplace grievance process as well as other ongoing.
Bishop said her conduct has always been professional and she rejects the allegations that “I am ‘hostile and arrogant’ to staff, that I have ‘godlike powers, unchecked’ and the more general allegations that, under my chairmanship of council meetings, there is a ‘culture of fear and intimidation’ … that council is ‘dysfunctional and toxic under the current regime’, [or] that elected members are ‘afraid’”.
Plane crashes as it returns to Sydney

Luca Ittimani
A plane has crashed in dense bushland on the state’s south coast while returning to Sydney, sparking a search last night on foot by emergency services for the crash site and the lone pilot.
The pilot had taken the small recreational aircraft out on a solo trip earlier on Thursday, flying south from Bankstown airport in Sydney’s west, police said.
The pilot was flying back to Sydney but crashed in Budawang national park about 25km north of Batemans Bay, activating the plane’s emergency location transmitter.
Emergency services were called to the scene at 4.30pm on Thursday, with the state’s ambulance helicopter assisting police, fire and maritime services in locating the crash site from the air.
First responders could not reach the crash by vehicle or air due to the dense bush and adverse weather and were continuing their effort on foot, police said.
Guardian Australia understands police were considering using drones to assist the search.
Bowen tells 7.30 he can’t promise lower energy prices

Luca Ittimani
The climate change minister has declined to promise energy prices will fall, while acknowledging retail prices would determine the political success of the Albanese government’s new emissions target.
Speaking on ABC’s 7.30 last night, Chris Bowen said prices were “very important” to public support for the 2035 emissions reduction target of 62% to 70% but said the government had balanced climate change and living costs. He said:
Australians do want to see climate action but they also care about cost of living because it’s right before them every day … [but] the fundamental fact is that what’s good for your pocket is good for the planet and vice versa.
Bowen declined to guarantee that electricity prices would fall as the country adopted renewable energy or to specify a timeframe for Australians to see savings from solar and wind uptake. He instead pointed to government modelling showing lower prices were likely, saying:
I can guarantee that renewables are the cheapest form of energy. … We’ve never pretended, in the face of international energy pressures, that all this happens easily or quickly but we also don’t walk away from the fact that renewables are the cheapest form of energy ever known to humankind.
Welcome
Good morning and welcome to our live news blog. I’m Martin Farrer with the best of the breaking news and then your news guide will be Nick Visser.
Chris Bowen, the climate change minister, told ABC’s 7.30 last night that he can’t promise energy prices will fall. As he defended the his new emission target, Bowen acknowledged retail prices would determine the political success of the government’s policy. More to come.
Julie Bishop has categorically denied allegations of bullying made against her during a Senate inquiry, issuing a 25 page right of reply which has been published on the Senate committee’s website. More shortly.
And Rescue teams are searching dense bushland on foot near Batemans Bay in New South Wales to try to find a crashed plane and its lone pilot. The aircraft went missing yesterday on its way back to Sydney. More coming up.
