The country had amassed credits equal to more than a year's worth of global warming emissions, after exceeding what were widely seen as low-bar targets negotiated before the 2015 Paris agreement.
"Their permanent cancellation means no future government can use this loophole to meet their climate targets," the government said.
"Their use was rightly characterised at home and abroad as an accounting trick -- and an excuse not to have any climate or energy policy," it said in a statement.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's centre-left Labor government had already promised not to use the so-called Kyoto carryover credits to meet its emission-cutting targets.
"Without this strong action, more than 700 million credits - representing more than a year's worth of national emissions, could have been used in dodgy accounting in years to come," the statement said.
"Instead, the Albanese government is driving policies to deliver real, new emissions reduction to not just to meet climate targets but to prepare the Australian economy for a net zero global economy."
Albanese won power in May 2022 elections promising to end a decade of climate foot-dragging under the previous conservative coalition government.
One of the world's largest coal exporters, Australia has since committed to cutting carbon emissions by 43 percent by 2030 from 2005 levels, on a path to reaching net-zero emissions by 2050.
Australia's climate change minister, Chris Bowen, said the conservative opposition parties could not decide whether they believed in climate change.
"So we're closing the loophole for dodgy accounting tricks they have tried to use in the past," Bowen said.
Australia's carbon dioxide emissions per person are among the highest in the world at 15.3 tonnes, surpassing US levels, World Bank figures show.
The country is the world's second-largest exporter of thermal coal, after Indonesia, and the largest exporter of metallurgical coal, which is used in steel making.
UK issues its first carbon storage licences
London (AFP) Sept 15, 2023 -
Britain announced Friday it had granted 21 carbon storage permits, in a first licensing round for the still largely experimental technology that the government hopes will help reach net zero.
A total of 14 companies were awarded 21 licences to utilise depleted oil and gas reservoirs and saline aquifers which cover around 12,000 square kilometres, the North Sea Transition Authority said in a statement.
The agency regulates and influences the oil, gas and carbon storage industries.
The locations could store up to 30 million tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2) per year by 2030 -- approximately 10 percent of UK annual emissions which were 341.5 million tonnes in 2021.
Shell, Perenco and ENI were among the companies to receive permits for the sites off the coast of Norfolk, eastern England.
Other sites are being considered off Aberdeen, Scotland and Liverpool on England's northwest coast.
"Carbon storage will play a crucial role in the energy transition, storing carbon dioxide deep under the seabed and playing a key role in hydrogen production and energy hubs," NSTA Chief Executive Stuart Payne said.
However, many experts and environmental groups question the extent that the government is planning to rely on this technology, which is still largely unproven at large scale and costly.
"CCS (Carbon capture and storage) is expensive, illustrated by oil companies not going it alone but demanding the government co-fund all these projects," Erik Dalhuijsen, co-founder and director of Aberdeen Climate Action CIC, told AFP.
"Not emitting the stuff is far, far, far cheaper already," he said, adding the technology "is by no means certain to be able to work at all".
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