A pillar of the movement · Under ROI

Net Zero

Australia is legally committed to net zero by 2050. The current pathway costs the country approximately $1.5 trillion in fragmented programme spend and structurally fails to hit the target. The SBC pathway delivers the emissions reduction as the by-product of an infrastructure programme that runs a profit.

~275–325 Mt
CO2/yr Australian domestic retirement & sequestration at SBC programme maturity
~455–585 Mt
CO2/yr displaced in Asia-Pacific importing grids by HVDC export
~730–910 Mt
CO2/yr combined global emissions impact — comparable to the UK's entire current footprint

Net zero pays for itself when the SBC builds it.

Australia’s legislated 2050 net zero commitment is a serious legal and policy obligation. The political question every government faces is: what will it cost? The honest answer on the current trajectory is approximately $1.5 trillion across two decades in fragmented programme spend — Rewiring the Nation, household electrification subsidies, EV tax incentives, AEMO ISP transmission, continuing fuel import bills, carbon credit purchases — with a structurally infeasible pathway to 2050 because heavy road freight, aviation, mining diesel, and agricultural diesel have no credible electrification mechanism without continental electric rail. The SBC inverts the question. The same infrastructure programme that retires fossil fuel demand is also the largest revenue-generating asset in Australian history. Net zero is not the cost; it is the by-product. The savings are measured tier by tier, on the established framework from Memo 20 (ROI) and Memo 21 (Without SBC).

Tier 1 — Direct SBC revenue

Cash flow from selling clean energy and clean transport.

Total Tier 1 at maturity: ~$170–231 B/yr — locked working figures from Memo 20.

The SBC’s own services replace fossil-fuel-based activities one for one. HVDC export to Asia replaces coal export revenue. Maglev passenger fares replace domestic aviation jet fuel. Freight tolls replace diesel B-doubles. Each dollar earned by the SBC is also a tonne of carbon retired.

Tier 2 — Enabled outcomes & avoided spend

Programme spend Australia no longer has to incur.

Total Tier 2 at maturity: ~$94–172 B/yr Commonwealth share — on industry revenue much larger, captured at ~25–30% via tax flowback.

This is the spend Australia is currently committing to incur — under the current net-zero policy framework — that the SBC eliminates by removing the underlying need. Rewiring the Nation. AEMO ISP. Household electrification subsidies. EV tax incentives. Continuing fuel imports. Avoided desalination capex. The SBC is the cheaper path to the same emissions outcome.

Tier 3 — Cascading economic activation

The uptick across the rest of the economy.

Listed, not summed — honest counting avoids double-counting against Tier 1 and Tier 2.

The Snowy 1.0 lesson is that Tier 3 is where most of the real long-term return lives — but applying multipliers turns the analysis into attack-bait (the HSRA case). The SBC programme’s Tier 3 effects are named here and described per Memo 20, not aggregated. Each is a net-zero-relevant outcome the SBC delivers as a structural side effect.

CO2 arithmetic

~275–325 Mt CO2/yr retired domestically — plus ~455–585 Mt displaced in Asia-Pacific grids.

Australia’s 2005 baseline was 616 Mt; current emissions are approximately 470 Mt. The legislated targets: 43% reduction by 2030 (351 Mt), 62–70% by 2035 (185–234 Mt), net zero by 2050. The federal government’s own projections miss the 2030 target by 25–68 Mt and the 2035 target by 86–200 Mt. The SBC delivers the four big retirements as a structural consequence of building productive infrastructure — not as a separate climate programme. The MMP billion-tree policy adds sequestration on water enabled by the Sovereign Aqueduct Network. The HVDC interlinks separately displace coal and diesel generation in Asia-Pacific importing grids. The full arithmetic is in Memo 25 — The Net Zero Path to 2050 Target.

Domestic retirements & sequestration — ~275–325 Mt CO2/yr

~140 Mt
Electricity grid retired — 1,000 GW desert solar + 40 GW Alice Hub pumped hydro, carried via the HVDC backbone on the SBC corridor. Coal closes commercially as power prices fall below its marginal cost.
~80–100 Mt
Transport retired — sub-10c/kWh power drives the EV transition commercially (no subsidy needed); electric freight on the corridor displaces diesel; east-coast maglev retires domestic aviation. See Memo 12.
~20–30 Mt
Heavy industry process heat retired — gas-fired furnaces, kilns, boilers, and steam generation electrified on the sub-10c/kWh power base. Industrial heat pumps, electric boilers, induction furnaces become commercially preferred.
~20–30 Mt
Mining and agricultural diesel retired — corridor heavy-haul rail electrification reaches mining; agrivoltaic deployment supplies on-farm power for the equipment transition.
~15–25 Mt
MMP billion-tree sequestration — 1 billion trees on ~1.67 million hectares of new environmental plantings, watered by the Sovereign Aqueduct Network. Direct biomass sequestration on land the aqueduct makes biophysically viable.

International displacement — ~455–585 Mt CO2/yr

~650 TWh/yr
Clean Australian electricity delivered to Asia-Pacific grids via 82.5 GW of continuous subsea HVDC export at ~90% availability. Importing nations (Indonesia, Vietnam, Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, with longer links to Japan and South Korea) dispatch the renewable power ahead of their coal and diesel generation by merit order. Their fossil plants physically run fewer hours. At importing-grid emissions intensity of 0.7–0.9 kg CO2/kWh, displaced emissions are ~455–585 Mt CO2/yr at programme maturity. Not a carbon credit transaction — a coal plant in Indonesia or a diesel generator in the Philippines that physically does not run for the hours Australian HVDC is supplying the grid. MMP policy: negotiate Article 6 bilateral credit-sharing with importing nations, 50/50 split as a starting position. Australia’s NDC share at 50/50: ~230–290 Mt CO2/yr.

Combined global emissions impact at SBC programme maturity: ~730–910 Mt CO2/yr — approximately double Australia’s current domestic emissions of 470 Mt. More than the entire current emissions of the United Kingdom (~400 Mt/yr); approaches the entire current emissions of Germany (~700 Mt/yr). The residual domestic gap at 2050 is ~145–195 Mt: fugitive emissions from legacy fossil operations, agricultural emissions outside the SBC envelope, hard-to-abate industrial process emissions. Named openly rather than offset away. The full arithmetic, sector by sector, is in Memo 25 — The Net Zero Path to 2050 Target.

Why this is the only credible path to 2050.

Three things make the SBC the only structurally credible path to 2050. First, heavy road freight, aviation, mining and agricultural diesel are 81% of transport emissions and have no credible electrification mechanism without continental electric rail and continental sub-10c/kWh power. The SBC is the only programme in front of Australia that delivers both. Second, the current legislated programme is failing on its own terms: transmission projects like HumeLink (190% cost blowout) and Marinus Link (250% cost blowout) are stalled by farmland conflicts and community opposition; there is no programme for continental electric freight at all; the Safeguard Mechanism is modelled to deliver only 12% reduction with 58–68% met via offsets rather than physical retirement. Third, the political durability of net zero across electoral cycles depends on the programme paying for itself. The SBC pays for itself from approximately Phase 1 onwards. It survives because it generates revenue. Net zero on the with-SBC pathway is structurally locked in by the economics; on the without-SBC pathway it is contingent on continuous political will that no Western democracy has demonstrated.

The legislated target is achievable on the with-SBC pathway. It is not achievable on the current pathway. That is the single most important sentence on this page.

Read Memo 25 — The Net Zero Path to 2050 Target

The complete sector-by-sector arithmetic. The Article 6 credit-sharing position. The transmission projects that are failing. The freight programme that does not exist. Why the without-SBC pathway misses every legislated target and the with-SBC pathway lands them all.

Read Memo 25 →