âLeft us all expĎsedâŚâ: A veteran journalist delivers a fierce wÉÉžning to Chris Bowen over Australiaâs renewable push â raising questions about whatâs really behind the policy, and why some fear the full impact is still being kept from public view
A veteran journalist has accused Chris Bowen of leaving Australia exposed to fuel shortages and effectively handing control of the nationâs energy system to China.
Seven News Spotlight reporter Liam Bartlett blamed the Albanese governmentâs aggressive renewables push for what he called an imminent national energy crisis.
âIf the war with Iran has done nothing else, itâs given us all a realâworld, realâtime lesson in what truly runs our lives,â he wrote in an op-ed on Monday morning.
âA brutal reminder of which fuels actually matter and what government must do to protect the chain of supply and hence the livelihoods of its people.â
Bartlett questioned how a nation rich in coal, gas and oil could be facing fuel stress at petrol stations, calling the situation rhetorical and directing blame at the countryâs Energy Minister.
âOf course, all of these are rhetorical questions because our road to the global fuel begging bowl is a oneâway street to the office of energy minister Chris Bowen,â he wrote.
He accused Bowen of pursuing renewables with âthe kind of zealotry usually reserved for religious extremistsâ.
âIndeed, the mad mullahs of the Iranian regime would be hard pressed to be more singleâminded and lacking in balance,â Bartlett added.

Liam Bartlett (pictured) criticised Minister Chris Bowen over his handling of the fuel crisis
Bartlett pointed out Chinaâs dominance over the minerals vital to renewable energy technology, and argued Bowen had failed to reckon with the moral and strategic costs of relying on that supply chain.
âIn developing countries, like the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zambia, the extent of the misery created by Chinese mining companies is palpable,â he said.
âHealth and safety regulations are nonâexistent with workplace deaths a common occurrence. Child and slave labour is used with impunity and environmental safeguards are a foreign concept.â
He shared the perspective of Zambian lawyer Mehluli Batakathi, who represents farmers harmed by pollution from a Chineseâowned copper mine.
âWeâre at the tail end of the chain because you guys in your part of the world are talking about renewable energy, green revolution and whatever,â Batakathi said.
âBut maybe itâs clean on your side but on our side, itâs definitely not clean.â
Bartlett warned Australiaâs netâzero ambitions depend almost entirely on this questionable supply chain.
âWithout Chinese components or the minerals theyâre extracting from these Dickensian hellâholes, our net zero future is dead,â he wrote.

Bartlett argued that Bowenâs (pictured) âobsession with renewablesâ was harming Australia
The opinion piece followed a tense public clash between Bartlett and Bowen at a Sydney press conference this month, amid rising fuel supply concerns.
The exchange, broadcast live, quickly turned heated.
âIf this war in Iran has shown us nothing else, hasnât it proved once and for all, that your obsession with renewables will only lead us back to another energy crisis?â Bartlett asked.
He accused Bowen of dodging an exclusive Spotlight interview.
âWhat are you afraid of?â he called out.
Bartlett repeatedly tried to interject, at one point calling the minister âa hypocriteâ, prompting Bowen to push back.
âYouâve come to a press conference. Congratulations,â Bowen replied.
âI think you need to show a bit more respect to your colleagues. This is a full room of journalists. Everyone gets one question.â

Bowen (pictured) clashed with Bartlett during a heated exchange during a press conference
Bartlett retorted that heâd been seeking answers âsince the 24th of Januaryâ, pressing Bowen on what he called the ministerâs ârenewable obsessionsâ.
Bowen countered that he was holding daily press conferences and rejected claims he was avoiding scrutiny.


