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Barnaby Joyce speaking at the Armidale inquiry hearing into the impact of renewable energy zones on rural and regional NSW. Video supplied by Vikki Campion.
Transcript
00:00The roads are virtuous and you see them in cities. Roads are virtuous and you see them in cities.
00:05But intermittent power precincts, which can quite ably be built off the coast of Sydney or off the coast of Melbourne,
00:12are not built there because apparently the virtue runs out when you're inside of the cities.
00:17It is an issue that the virtue doesn't go as far as getting an ironclad, an ironclad promise
00:25that any of the solar panels will have anything to do with the slave labour that constructs solar panels in this town province.
00:31Or that the cobalt in the solar panels doesn't come from the child labour in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
00:42These are things that in that virtuous, swami presentations we get, which are distinctly left behind.
00:49It's a swindle, Mr Chair, in the fact that so many promises are made to local communities and so little is delivered.
00:57Let's look at Glennon's as a classic example.
01:01Basically billions invested in intermittent power precincts.
01:05What's happened to the town?
01:07Has its population grown? Are there new industries there? Are there new jobs there?
01:12There's only probably a handful, maybe one or two.
01:15There's no car park at the intermittent power precinct.
01:18It's hardly anybody works there.
01:20Yet they promise so much.
01:22So why is it happening, Mr Chair?
01:24It's happening because there is a massive pecuniary benefit that goes to a select few.
01:32And we can see those proponents out there at the moment.
01:34Mr Forrest, Chinese overseas companies, international companies from China, from Singapore, from France, from Holland.
01:44These are the real benefits of the swindle on the Australian people and the swindle on the people of New England.

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