Australia news live: RSL to review welcome to country policy; Angus Taylor vows to double fuel reserve

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The RSL has announced it will review its guidance on welcome to country addresses at Anzac Day services after Indigenous leaders were booed at three dawn services on Saturday.

The RSL national president, Peter Tinley told the ABC on Monday that the body would review its policies on RSL organised commemorations and “provide guidance to our branches as to how they might attend to this”.

Tinley said he was appalled by the booing during the dawn ceremonies but added that some of the “anodyne acknowledgments” can get “overworked”.

It can get overworked … so then it becomes a question of how are we going to review this process and make it more relevant.

I think there’s a real opportunity for the RSL to lead and provide a better expression that is more tailored and appropriate for the commemorative day that it is.

Tinley said it was a “good thing” for the guidelines and service to be dynamic and reflective of the community.

The federal environment minister, Murray Watt, will use a speech later today to lay out Australia’s credentials in protecting the Great Barrier Reef before a meeting of the world heritage committee in July.

Global heating remains the reef’s most significant threat, Watt will say, along with impacts from severe weather events, fishing, outbreaks of coral-eating starfish and poor water quality related to clearing of vegetation on land. At an event hosted by the Great Barrier Reef Foundation, Watt will say:

Faced with these challenges, humankind must be at its best. That’s why we are taking up the fight to protect the Great Barrier Reef for future generations.

Watt will also flag reforms to national environment laws agreed last year that strengthened the approvals needed to clear vegetation within 50m of watercourses in the reef’s catchments.

Consecutive governments have had to lobby Unesco experts continually for years to prevent the 21-country committee from placing the reef on its “in danger” list.

Last year the committee asked the government to submit a progress report by 1 February before this year’s meeting in South Korea.

Unlike in previous years, such as 2023, the committee last year made no specific mention that the reef would be considered for the “in danger” list at the next meeting.

The opposition leader, Angus Taylor, says a Coalition government would double fuel reserves in Australia to at least 60 days, and spend $800m to build a new storage facility.

Announcing a new policy alongside the Nationals leader, Matt Canavan, Taylor said the Albanese government should lift baseline stockholdings from 1 January next year, to get Australia closer to the 90-day minimum reserves required by the International Energy Agency.

Taylor said:

This is a plan the prime minister should pick up today. No excuses, no delays. If fuel stops, Australia stops. It’s that simple. Trucks don’t move, supermarkets don’t stock, businesses shut their doors.

We are putting forward a practical plan to make sure that never happens. More fuel in reserve, more storage on the ground and a country that can stand on its own two feet.

The Coalition says their plan would mean Australia could reach 60 days’ supply by the end of this decade.

When Labor proposed a 90-day fuel reserve before the 2019 election, Taylor, then the energy minister, said the plan would cost “tens of billions of dollars” and called on Labor to explain how it would be funded.

The RSL has announced it will review its guidance on welcome to country addresses at Anzac Day services after Indigenous leaders were booed at three dawn services on Saturday.

The RSL national president, Peter Tinley told the ABC on Monday that the body would review its policies on RSL organised commemorations and “provide guidance to our branches as to how they might attend to this”.

Tinley said he was appalled by the booing during the dawn ceremonies but added that some of the “anodyne acknowledgments” can get “overworked”.

It can get overworked … so then it becomes a question of how are we going to review this process and make it more relevant.

I think there’s a real opportunity for the RSL to lead and provide a better expression that is more tailored and appropriate for the commemorative day that it is.

Tinley said it was a “good thing” for the guidelines and service to be dynamic and reflective of the community.

Good morning and welcome to our live news blog. I’m Martin Farrer with the top overnight stories and then it will be Nick Visser with the main action.

The RSL has announced it will review its guidance on welcome to country addresses at Anzac Day services after Indigenous leaders were booed at three dawn services on Saturday.

And the opposition has revealed a new policy, to double Australia’s fuel reserves to 60 days.

More on this, and much more, coming soon.

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: theguardian.com