World News Intel

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese returned home from his official US visit with a belly full of sarsaparilla-braised short ribs and a string of announcements under his belt.

Amid the glitz and glamour, the spotlight during the visit was on Australia’s critical minerals sector. Albanese and US President Joe Biden unveiled a multi-billion-dollar plan to bolster Australia’s domestic minerals industry to address supply chain vulnerabilities and counter China’s market dominance.

Yet, while Albanese and Biden framed the investment as key to the future of an “innovation alliance” between the two countries, a key benefit was lost in the messaging: its utility to clean energy technologies such as electric vehicles.

Both countries stand to gain from ensuring this momentum on climate-related issues continues. But publicly framing it as such is just as essential.

In fact, as the dust settles on Albanese’s visit, this kind of cooperation on climate change is what may prove vital to guaranteeing the relevance of the Australia-US alliance for generations to come.



As Albanese heads to Washington, what can he hope to bring home?


What our polling found

In August, the United States Studies Centre polled over 1,000 Australians on the key issues concerning Australia’s relationship with the United States. The results, published today, reveal a generational divide in how Australians see their country’s closest ally.

Young Australians hold a far less rosy view of US behaviour in Asia than older Australians. Fewer than a quarter of those aged 18–34 agree the United States plays a helpful role in the region.

This cohort are also markedly less likely to say the US alliance makes Australia safer. And only a third of those aged 18–34 think the AUKUS pact is a good idea for Australia, compared to a strong majority (62%) of those over 65 years old.



With AUKUS, Australia has wedded itself to a risky US policy on China – and turned a deaf ear to the region


So, why does support for the so-called “unbreakable alliance” splinter among young people?

Whether obliquely or directly, initiatives like AUKUS are driven by the strategic needs of the growing competition between the US and China.

Australian officials regularly speak of deterring aggression in the region and responding alongside the US and “like-minded” partners to “coercive unilateral actions”. This is a thinly veiled swipe at Beijing’s growing assertiveness and regional ambitions.

An AUKUS meeting between the leaders of the US, Australia and the UK at Point Loma naval base in San Diego in March.
Stefan Rousseau/AP

But this China-centric alliance agenda is unlikely to resonate with young people. For them, another priority is front of mind: climate change.

Our polling finds a majority of young Australians (57%) think their country should prioritise fighting climate change over competing with China. And compared to older Australians, those aged 18-34 are twice as likely to “strongly agree” with doing so.



United States Studies Centre/Author provided

These results are unsurprising. Young people have grown up in a time when unprecedented climatic events are the new norm and appear a much greater and more immediate threat than Beijing’s geostrategic ambitions.

According to UN Secretary General António Guterres, the world is now entering a grimly termed “era of global boiling.” We have just experienced the hottest global month on record in July. And just a few years after the costliest bushfire season in Australian history, we could be facing yet another “unprecedented” fire threat this summer.

If the Australia-US alliance is to endure, our leaders must embrace the challenge of climate change with the same urgency with which they have responded to China’s challenge to the regional order.

A School Strike 4 Life protest in Melbourne in May 2021.
James Ross/AAP

Keeping climate on the public agenda

There have been some steps in this direction. In May, Albanese and Biden said climate would be a critical component of the Australia-US relationship, joining decades of defence and economic cooperation as the “third pillar” of the alliance. The two leaders then agreed on a compact that pledged to bolster climate innovation and investment hand in hand.

Of course, addressing climate change also remains pragmatic from a geostrategic perspective.

Delivering on the principles of the compact – along with Australia’s joint bid to host the global climate talks known as COP31 and its recent re-joining of the UN-backed Green Climate Fund – will be vital to demonstrating our commitment to climate action, particularly with our Pacific neighbours.



Australia and the US are firm friends on defence – now let’s turn that into world-beating climate action


With China recently marking the tenth anniversary of its Belt and Road Initiative, there is growing pressure to deliver on these climate initiatives and infrastructure in the Pacific. This is also an important opportunity to provide a distinct values-based alternative to Beijing’s infrastructure deals.

The announcements from Albanese’s state visit are among the first positive steps towards translating the compact’s lofty ambitions into concrete action. But they must not be the last.

Both Albanese and Biden would do well to ensure that climate remains firmly on the agenda. Young people’s support for the alliance depends on it.

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