Victoria isn't doing enough to make sure poor and disadvantaged communities aren't penalised by attempts to tackle climate change, a new report says.
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The Victorian Council of Social Service fears vulnerable groups, including people in public housing, and Aboriginal, rural and coastal communities, risk being left behind in the fight against global warming.
"If you are struggling to keep up with day-to-day expenses, protecting yourself from the impacts of climate change can be an insurmountable challenge," the council's A Climate of Fairness report to be released on Monday says.
Council chief executive Emma King says the state government should scrap moves to make renters chip in for solar panels, under a planned tenant-landlord loan and rebate scheme.
"There shouldn't be any upfront cost to renters if a landlord wants to upgrade their investment property," Ms King said.
The co-payment forces tenants to pay for an upgrade to a house they don't own, while the landlord scoops up the improved capital value, the council argues.
Also among VCOSS' 21 recommendations to ensure poorer Victorians aren't left behind on climate change action, is a call to expand subsidies to help make low-income households more energy efficient.
Ms King says while moves to combat and mitigate the effects of global warming can't wait, they must not come at the expense of society's vulnerable.
"If we respond to climate change in a way that is unfair, we'll be punishing the people who can least afford it: the sick, the poor and the socially isolated," she said.
Australian Associated Press