Come on people, the discussion in this thread is filled with all sorts of baseless accusations, from a few players, and it's quite obviously almost all in one direction.
The report being cited assumes wholesale electricity prices go to over $130/MWh. The cost of renewables at the moment is probably somewhere below $50/MWh, and not much more than that with firming included (so no need to go down that line of attack). These prices have been going down quite dramatically for many years, while figures being talked about for a coal plant are over $50/MWh just for the fuel to run them. So unless a Coalition government decides to put our money towards building and subsidising the running of a new coal power station, we ain't going to see any more built. And anyway, since the carbon pricing mechanism we had has been removed, the price of power has increased, while our emissions, which were falling, immediately started rising again.
As someone in their 30s, I don't see the appeal of trusting a party filled with climate change deniers. Their policies seem designed to do as little as they think they can get away with, with much of it being a handout to companies who in many cases already have an incentive to implement the changes they're going to be paid for.
I don't believe anyone's actually suggested wind power alone is the solution to Australia's energy needs when combating climate change?
As for the rest of this thread, and super...the generation which benefited so magnificently from an almost limitless ability to funnel income into super at low tax rates (a mechanism no longer available to those of us working) are complaining because the ALP is proposing to not pay them back the company tax that was paid by the companies they own shares in? All so that they don't have to touch their capital, allowing them to leave it to their kids. Far be it for me to begrudge anyone their hard earned wealth, but sound economic management would surely be to target tax concessions to where they're most effective, not to those who'll live an extremely comfortable life even without them.
As for government debt, the shouting about it seems to have gone quiet while the Coalition's been in power, despite it doubling.
</rant>