Australia live news: cruise ship with 800 Covid-positive passengers docks in Sydney; Albanese at Cambodia summit

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Greens plan to phase out soft plastics follow recycling collapse

More single-use soft plastics would be phased out of Victorian supermarkets under a strategy released by the Greens.

The nation’s largest soft plastic recycling program, REDcycle, was suspended this week over concerns items were not being properly processed, posing environmental and safety risks.

Users had been dropping off soft plastics at collection points for supermarkets such as Coles and Woolworths, before it emerged millions of plastic bags were being stored in warehouses.

The suspension has spurred the Victorian Greens to call for a state-based plan.

It would include a ban on more single-use plastics, including fruit and vegetables wrapped in plastic, and offer free heavy-weight plastic bags, coffee cups and takeaway containers.

A working group would be established to set procurement targets for the use of soft plastics in certain infrastructure projects, $150 million to boost recycling capacity and $100,000 for more water bubblers.

Victorian Greens MP Ellen Sandell blamed the suspension of the REDcycle program on a lack of ambition from governments.

People have shown they’ll go out of their way to do the right thing by taking their soft plastics to supermarkets for recycling.

It’s governments who now need to step up their action by phasing out incessant plastic and making the recycling system work.

– AAP

Katharine Murphy

Katharine Murphy

Now we’ve covered off Saturday’s logistics in Cambodia, let’s cover off the talking point of the moment. One of the focal points of this trip is whether or not Australia’s prime minister will meet the Chinese leadership either in Phnom Penh (it would be the Chinese premier if it happens here), or later, in Bali. Xi Jinping will go to the G20, and reports suggest he’ll meet the US president, Joe Biden, there.

If we see a meeting between Albanese and the Chinese leadership this week, it will be a big deal. It would be the first contact at leader level since 2019. But the short answer to this “will they or won’t they” question is we still don’t know whether or not there will be dialogue. The diplomatic signalling points to some sort of encounter – a bilateral meeting, or perhaps a “pull aside” (this is an unofficial chat in a corridor during the daily orienteering around the summit). But Australian officials certainly aren’t speculating, so we will have to wait and see. If the conversation happens, Albanese has signalled pressing for an end to costly sanctions on Australian exports will be front and centre. We expect Albanese will catch up with Biden over the coming days.

Albanese to meet Ukrainian foreign minister

Katharine Murphy

Katharine Murphy

Our political editor, Katharine Murphy, has sent this briefing on what to expect from Anthony Albanese’s summitry in Cambodia today:

Good morning from the Cambodian capital Phnom Penh, where Anthony Albanese is kicking off his first day of the November summit season. Australia’s prime minister will attend the Asean-Australia summit in Cambodia on Saturday, and the East Asia Summit on Sunday before heading for the G20 in Bali, and the Apec summit in Bangkok.

The prime minister will begin Saturday’s program with a meeting with Ukraine’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, who is in Phnom Penh at the invitation of the Cambodian government. Albanese will express Australia’s strong support for the people of Ukraine. Albanese will then meet the summit host, the prime minister of Cambodia, Hun Sen. It’s not their first conversation. Albanese and the Cambodian prime minister met for the first time in the late 1980s when Albanese was a young political staffer. The two leaders recalled this encounter during a recent conversation. Late morning local time, Albanese will deliver his opening remarks at the summit, before rolling into meetings with the prime ministers of Vietnam and Laos.

This cluster of international meetings comes as the world is battling an inflation shock, an energy crisis caused by Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, and rising geo-strategic competition in the Indo-Pacific region. If Asean is a new concept for you, this grouping was first formed in 1967. The founding partners were Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines and Thailand. The group has expanded over time. The East Asia Summit has 18 members – the 10 Asean nations (Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam) – plus Australia, China, India, Japan, New Zealand, South Korea, Russia and the United States.

Just a couple of other contextual things. Asean is often criticised for a lack of strategic policies and coherent leadership. Decision-making happens by consensus and the group lacks a unified approach to the rise of China in the region, and human rights abuses in Myanmar. These points of friction will be front and centre over the coming days. This Asean group sits at the epicentre of escalating great power competition (by that, we mean the geostrategic contest between China and the US) and Australia talks a lot about Asean “centrality” when we articulate our foreign policy. China’s line in the region is the Indo-Pacific strategy of the US erodes Asean centrality. While Australia invests a lot in relationships with Asean countries, we are also pursuing other security agreements in our region which pull us further into the orbit of the US – such as the revived “Quad” group, and the Aukus partnership with the US and the UK.

Welcome

Good morning. Thanks for joining us for our Australian live news coverage.

  • The main political interest of the day comes from Cambodia where Anthony Albanese is kicking off a week-long schedule of diplomacy at the Asean-Australia summit in Phnom Penh. His first engagement is a meeting with Ukraine’s foreign minister, who has been invited by the Cambodian government ahead of the G20 in Bali next week. The prime minister will then meet the summit host, the prime minister of Cambodia, Hun Sen. He will then make a speech to the summit a bit later in the morning. Our political editor, Katharine Murphy, is with the PM and there’s a full update coming up from her.

  • The cruise ship Majestic Princess docked in Sydney this morning at about 6am with around 800 passengers infected with Covid-19. It has been on a 12-day voyage to New Zealand. It is the biggest single outbreak since the Ruby Princess cruiseliner arrived in Sydney in April 2020. It comes as Covid infections are exploding across Australia in a fourth wave of the virus driven by Omicron variants.

  • Albanese isn’t the only government member attending a summit this week as the climate minister, Chris Bowen, is due to arrive in Egypt for the second week of the Cop27 summit. The US president, Joe Biden, addressed the gathering overnight and warned that the world faced a “pivotal” moment in the fight against climate change.