Chris Bowen is like the dodgy bloke at a Sunday market flogging knock-off sunglasses. Nobody’s buying, but he just won’t shut up. The Hunter offshore wind project just collapsed in flames, and instead of admitting it was a fantasy, Bowen is already pacing the lot like a desperate salesman. “Mate, just give me a chance, it’ll work this time!”
It won’t. It never does.
Equinor — a Norwegian giant — took one look at the numbers and said, nah, we’re out. And these guys are in the business of wind. If they won’t touch Bowen’s shiny toy with a ten-foot turbine blade, why should Australians be forced to bankroll it?
But here’s the thing: Bowen cannot afford to let this die. Politically, it would be a humiliation. So he’ll do what Labor always does — bribe reality with your money. He’ll throw taxpayer cash at the problem until someone — anyone — agrees to play along. Doesn’t matter if it’s viable. Doesn’t matter if it destroys tourism, fishing, or the coastline. As long as he can wave around a glossy brochure and crow about “Australia’s green future,” he’ll sign the cheque.
That’s not leadership. That’s desperation.
Picture it: Chris Bowen, hunched over the phone at 2am, begging foreign corporations like a debt-ridden gambler. “Please, please, take the deal. I’ll sweeten it. Billions in subsidies. Guaranteed profits. I’ll even shrink the zone again!” It’s pathetic. It’s not policy — it’s begging with your credit card.
And when it fails — again — do you think Bowen will take the blame? Of course not. He’ll mumble something about “global headwinds” and “supply chain pressures,” and then guess what? He’ll ask you to pay for round two.
This is the cycle:
- Bowen announces a miracle project.
- Corporations pocket subsidies.
- The project collapses.
- Taxpayers foot the bill.
- Bowen spins, shrugs, and starts over.
Meanwhile, your power bills soar. Your industries collapse. Your communities get strung along like fools.
So let’s be honest: Chris Bowen isn’t the Energy Minister. He’s the nation’s most expensive salesman. And the only thing he’s selling is a lie — one you’re forced to pay for, again and again.
How long before Australians say enough?