Thursday, October 13, 2011

Remarks by Stephen Lieberman, Minister Counselor for USUN, to the UN General Assembly's Fifth Committee (Administrative and Budgetary), on OIOS/IAAC

Stephen Lieberman
Counselor for UN Management and Reform
U.S. Mission to the United Nations
New York, NY
October 4, 2011


AS DELIVERED

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

The United States thanks Under-Secretary-General Ms. Carman Lapointe for her presentation of the annual report on the work of the Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS). We note the continued improvement in these reports and appreciate the directness and brevity that allow Member States to focus on the issues at hand and what needs to be done to enhance the work of OIOS.

We also thank the Chairman of the Independent Audit Advisory Committee (IAAC), Mr. David Walker, for introducing his Committee’s annual report to the Fifth Committee and for the insight the Committee provides on several important issues. We appreciate the IAAC’s reiteration of recommendations made in the 64th and 65th General Assembly on OIOS and the oversight function within the United Nations, as well as the recommendations on the accountability framework. We look forward to discussing these important recommendations with a goal of adopting those needed to provide clarity. We also note the recommendations related to performance auditing and the roles of the Board of Auditors and OIOS.

The work of OIOS continues to be of critical importance to the ongoing viability and effectiveness of the United Nations. OIOS has played, and will continue to play an important role in enhancing the transparency, accountability and effectiveness of the United Nations by exercising appropriate internal oversight, by promoting responsible use of resources, and by identifying and reporting instances of waste, fraud and mismanagement.

The United States commends Ms. Lapointe for the work she has done over the past year to revitalize and strengthen OIOS including filling the long vacant Director level positions for the Investigation and Inspection and Evaluation Divisions and reducing the overall vacancy level. We appreciate her innovation in streamlining audit reports and categorizing recommendations to provide more useful products for UN managers and we applaud her initiative to increase transparency by posting audit reports on the OIOS website in 2012. We are confident that these initiatives will contribute to improved management effectiveness and accountability in the UN.

As stated on previous occasions, the United States has long been concerned about the state of the investigative capacity within OIOS since the termination of the Procurement Task Force in 2008. It is our hope that with leadership positions filled, a realignment on how investigations and audits are conducted to ferret out system weaknesses that could lead to fraud and corruption, as well as hiring of qualified persons to investigate financial crimes, OIOS will soon achieve its true potential and provide robust oversight and accountability of the United Nations and the resources entrusted to it.

With all these much needed improvements underway, we note the need to enhance OIOS’s leadership team. We strongly support the resources requested for an Assistant Secretary General, who will assist the Under-Secretary-General with management of the Divisions as well as administrative and crosscutting issues.

There is still a need to resolve funding arrangements for OIOS, especially for those UN entities that receive their funding from voluntary contributions. The goal must be to ensure that OIOS maintains its operational independence while fulfilling their mandate. We must ensure that OIOS’s oversight work is not constrained due to funding shortfalls in regard to these entities. We concur with the IAAC’s recommendation requesting the Secretary-General to present a proposal addressing this issue as requested by the General Assembly, previously, and we look forward to receiving this proposal during the 66th General Assembly session.

As noted by the Under-Secretary-General in her foreword to the annual report, there are other areas that also need improvement in order for OIOS to be the strong and independent oversight entity envisioned by member states and the United Nations. We look forward to continuing to partner with Ms. Lapointe and colleagues in this Committee to address these issues.

Thank you.

Statement by Ambassador Joseph M. Torsella, at the UN General Assembly's Second Committee on Operational Activities for Development

Ambassador Joseph M Torsella
U.S. Representative for UN Management and Reform
U.S. Mission to the United Nations
New York, NY
October 12, 2011

AS DELIVERED

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

The United States supports the United Nations and its operational activities to improve people’s lives around the globe. We are often the largest donor and main partner to UN agencies in providing humanitarian assistance for the most vulnerable, combating disease, and providing shelter for refugees. Together, we are taking fundamental steps in breaking the cycle of poverty and providing the next generation with opportunities for a better future. From this perspective, the United States wishes to offer several constructive proposals aimed at enhancing confidence in and support for the UN’s operational activities:

First and foremost, the transparency and accountability of the UN’s Operational Activities is a top priority for the United States government. My government was the principal sponsor of the provision in General Assembly Resolution 59/272 that makes internal reports of the UN Office for Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) available to Member States upon request. We applaud Under-Secretary-General Lapointe’s recent announcement that OIOS will make internal audit reports available to the public beginning in January. While many operational agencies have recently taken similarly encouraging steps in this direction, they have yet to achieve full public disclosure of audit, oversight, and program information. We have recently addressed this issue at UNDP/UNFPA/UNOPS and UNICEF Board meetings. We welcome and support the commitment of the management of those UN organizations to public disclosure of their audits, and we urge them to reach this goal as soon as possible.

Second, it is equally important to refocus the operational activities discussions in the General Assembly on achieving solid performance and results. Many UN operational agencies are making important contributions in humanitarian, basic health, and poverty alleviation arenas. However, UN agencies often have difficulty capturing and communicating their development results. While we understand and fully appreciate the challenges that the UN faces in gathering and reporting these results from programs worldwide, it is imperative that the UN put in place systems to report meaningful results to the public. It is critical that the UN use evaluative information and program results as the basis for budgeting and resource allocation.

Third, as I noted in my statement on the U.N. budget to the General Assembly’s Fifth Committee, in a time of scarce resources, the United Nations cannot afford business as usual. The issue is not just how much money we allocate to each department or program, it is whether every dollar sent to the UN is being used in the most effective, efficient, and businesslike way.

The international community and domestic constituencies are increasingly demanding clear value for money. Some operational agencies that are funded wholly or partly by voluntary contributions are already trimming their budgets and finding ways to cut waste and do more with less. We applaud these efforts and encourage them to continue to streamline their activities. For the agencies that are maintaining the status quo, we ask them to reflect on the fact that they do not enjoy an automatic claim on taxpayers’ resources; they need to demonstrate their ability to use these resources to produce results. Indeed, the July 2011 ECOSOC resolution on operational activities requested that the Quadrennial Comprehensive Policy Review (QCPR) examine UN agencies’ effectiveness, efficiency, and relevance in connection with their funding. For example, in this regard, the UN funds and programs and the UN development system as a whole should immediately clamp down on the costly, and frankly wasteful, practice of business and first-class travel. This is an easy way to cut unnecessary costs while ensuring that scarce resources go to programs for those most in need.

Moreover, as we work together to modernize and improve the effectiveness of the UN development system, we must move beyond traditional North-South divides and embrace the new realities of the global partnership for development which includes important new state and non-state participants. In this day and age, a UN development system almost entirely dependent on ten traditional donors is an outdated and unsustainable formula.

Finally, Mr. Chairman,

Another important topic in the operational activities discussions is coordination among agencies to maximize the impact of their work in the field. The Resident Coordinator (RC) system is a key component of this coordination. In this regard, the “Delivering as One” pilot programs have demonstrated some concrete ways to work together more efficiently. It would be helpful, however, to have systematic evaluations of these programs in order to validate the results. Member States need to see these “Delivering as One” evaluations, which have been long in the planning, in time to provide useful data for the QCPR discussions.

With regard to the QCPR process, we would like to raise two additional coordination-related issues that were highlighted in the recent ECOSOC resolution on operational activities: First, funding of the Resident Coordinator system should involve burden-sharing. Relying exclusively on UNDP funding for the RC system not only places a heavy financial burden on UNDP, but it is inconsistent with the purpose of the RC system, which is a system shared by and for the benefit of the entire UN development community. Secondly, there is an urgent need to ensure enhanced coordination and consultation between UNDP, which is the manager of the RC system, and the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in the selection of RCs for countries likely to require significant humanitarian response operations.

Mr. Chairman,

The UN has a moral obligation not only to its donors but also to the international community, and especially to the poor and vulnerable who are the intended beneficiaries of its work, to account for its activities. We need to work harder to ensure that the UN becomes a more efficient and effective organization. We look forward to engaging in substantive discussions with you and the UN Member States during this session of the General Assembly.

Thank you.

Welcome to Twitter Amb. Joe Torsella

He is not the usual "Joe".
He promises to fight for the American Taxpayer inside the United Nations.

We wish him good luck!



Joe Torsella

Joe Torsella

@USJoe_UN
Philadelphian, US Ambassador, Average Joe. On behalf of the American taxpayer, I fight to cut waste and improve results at the UN.



Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Did Ahmadinejad Know About the Iranian Terror Plot on Washington?

by Claudia Rosett @ PajamasMedia.Com

Terror and carnage in Washington, D.C., with the Saudi ambassador assassinated by a bomb while dining at a restaurant packed with 100-150 other customers, possibly including a number of senators. That’s what “elements” of Iran’s government allegedly had planned for this autumn, according to court documents and press statements released Tuesday by U.S. authorities.

Americans are just now learning some of the details of this Iranian terror plot, in connection with charges brought against American-Iranian dual national Manssor Arbabsiar, now under arrest in New York. The criminal complaint, filed in the Southern District of New York, provides 21 pages of horrifying material, much of it amassed with the help of a paid undercover informant, who posed as an associate of the unnamed Mexican drug cartel the Iranians thought they had recruited for the hit (Barry Rubin, in a terrific Pajamas post, on what it all means, links to the complaint). The complaint lays out a trail in which Arbabsiar, a naturalized American living in Texas, conspired with members of Iran’s Quds Force, an arm of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps, to orchestrate the assassination on American soil of the Saudi ambassador to the United States. The plot went all the way to the top of the Quds Force, and involved hiring the services of a violent Mexican drug cartel to use explosives to murder the Saudi ambassador in Washington. If that succeeded, it was to be followed by other terrorist jobs. There are lots of fascinating details, including such trivia as the use of a code-name, “Chevrolet,” for the assassination plot; and such monstrosities as Arbabsiar’s comment to a U.S. undercover source that his Iranian co-conspirators wanted the Saudi ambassador killed, and if 100 bystanders were killed as well, “f–k ‘em.”

Yet the criminal complaint also includes a caveat: “No attempt has been made to set forth the complete factual history of this investigation or all of its details.”


CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL STORY @ ROSETT REPORT @ PAJAMASMEDIA.COM

The United Nations "Investment": Another Obama Administration economic triumph

CLICK HERE TO READ THIS ON HUMANEVENTS.COM

John Hayward


Another Obama Administration economic triumph.
by John Hayward




George Russell of Fox News has an interesting article today, dissecting the Obama Administration’s claim that the billions we pump into the United Nations are actually a wonderful “investment” that yields big returns for American business:

Is the multibillion-dollar U.S. annual payout to the United Nations a good investment? The Obama administration says it is a smart move. The facts, however, suggest otherwise.

The smart investment claim was made most recently by Esther Brimmer, Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs, the branch of State that includes U.N. oversight, during last month’s opening session of the U.N. General Assembly.

While arguing that “the U.N. helps sustain the global economic landscape that U.S. companies depend on,” Brimmer also declared that “the U.N. spends hundreds of millions of dollars every year procuring goods and services from American companies. They spend more money here than in any other country in the world -- more than $1.5 billion last year alone.”

Brimmer was invited to ring the opening bell at the NASDAQ last month, and elaborated on her “U.N. investment” theory in a speech she recounted via State Department blog post:

First, the UN helps sustain the global economic landscape that U.S. companies depend on. UN offices help protect American patents and intellectual property around the world. UN agencies promote global standards for things like international shipping, civil aviation, telecommunications, and postal services. Basically, if you're an American company doing business across borders, odds are, you're benefiting from the work the United States does in the UN.

Second, the UN spends hundreds of millions of dollars every year procuring goods and services from American companies. They spend more money here than in any other country in the world -- more than $1.5 billion dollars last year alone. So, American companies in places like Texas, Florida, New Jersey, and elsewhere know that the UN is a significant source of income and jobs for small, medium, and large U.S. companies.

Third, the UN is a boost for New York's economy. Aside from the thousands of diplomats and UN staff, the UN brings in hundreds of thousands of visitors every year. That means billions of dollars for local hotels, restaurants, and other businesses.

Of course, U.N. funding long predates either Obama or Brimmer’s arrival on the scene, but this is the first time I can remember a bureaucrat citing dollar figures to justify it as a money-making “investment.”

Brimmer’s first point is highly debatable, particularly as filtered through the inefficient reality of U.N. graft and corruption. The U.N. is a maze of leaky money pipes circling the world, and pouring money into as many palaces and sports car collections as worthy endeavors. Every dollar America “contributes” is at least as likely to fund rent-seeking “green” parasites, or fund a multi-million dollar “prize” for a human-rights violator, as to build a global economic super-highway for the benefit of businessmen.

Also, few of the corporations who really do stand to profit from Brimmer’s “investments” could be fairly described as small or medium-sized businesses. Even as the rest of the Obama Administration pretends to soothe the “frustrations” of Occupy Wall Street, she’s touting the rich fruits of taxpayer support for transnational mega-corporations.

Brimmer’s third point is even stranger: the residents of the other 49 states are supposed to be happy because massive United Nations funding is pouring money into New York City?

But her second, and principal, point is the one most in need of debunking, and Fox News’ Russell is up to the task:

According to the 2010 procurement summary, the U.S. did, in fact, get $1.5 billion in U.N. procurement contracts this year, making it the U.N.’s top source of supply in the world.

But when it comes to overall return on investment, the U.S. procurement bounty looks different --and worse.

According to U.S. government figures, Washington gave $7.7 billion to the widely varying branches of the U.N. global system last year -- meaning that for every dollar the U.S. put in, it got about 19.7 cents worth of procurement back.

(Emphasis mine.) Well, that kind of investment “genius” is right in line with the wonders of Obamanomics: spending a dollar of taxpayer money to make twenty cents for a few government-selected businesses.

Russell goes on to note that every other major developed nation gets a better “return on investment” than the U.S., except Germany. None of them are the kind of “investments” a private fund manager could keep his job by making – Britain gets 46.2 cents on the dollar for their $652.8 million contribution, while Germany only earns 15.2 cents on its $1.2 billion.

It’s hard to think of a worse “investment” than the United Nations, outside of the White House’s “green jobs” disasters. Like those scandals, the United Nations involves vast amounts of compulsory funding for the very attenuated benefit of a select few. I wonder if the traders at the NASDAQ politely stifled their laughter while Assistant Secretary Brimmer congratulated herself for losing eighty cents on the dollar.

Monday, October 10, 2011

U.S. and Europe fight over cuts in peacekeeping

undpwatch
of and Europe fight over cuts in How can US afford to pay

By Colum Lynch @ Turtlebay.ForeignPolicy.com

Is austerity making the world a more dangerous place? Republican hawks are making the case that the Obama administration's planned Pentagon cuts are making the world safe for bad guys, and now European governments are looking at their defense expenditures as well -- and they're targeting the blue helmets budget line, particularly in peacekeeping missions favored by the United States.

Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, fended off a push last month by European governments to press to consider cuts next year in U.N.-backed peacekeeping mission in Liberia, which costs upwards of $525 million a year, more than Liberia's $459 million annual national budget. Rice has also resisted calls from other European governments, like Britain and France, to consider deeper cuts in U.N. peacekeeping missions in Haiti and in Sudan.

France and Britain are required to pay, respectively, 7.5 percent and 8.16 percent of all U.N. peacekeeping costs.

U.S. officials say that peacekeeping missions must be adequately funded to ensure their success, and that European governments, who each pay a far smaller share of the U.N. peacekeeping budget, are in some instances motivated by a desire to shift funding to their own "pet" missions, not the commitment to fiscal discipline that they claim.

"There is no country that has a greater interest in the economies, effectiveness, and efficiencies of U.N. peacekeeping missions [than the United States]. We pay 27 percent of the bill while the Europeans pay a smaller percentage," Rice said in an interview with Turtle Bay. "For them to be holier than thou is a bit rich, to say the least."

"We want missions to succeed at maximum efficiency and minimum cost," she said, noting that the United States has already agreed to send thousands of U.N. peacekeepers from Haiti and Liberia back home. "We are all feeling the strain.... But we are not going to sacrifice the effectiveness and success of missions by prematurely closing them or prematurely cutting them down beyond what the security situation on the ground will allow."

But while Rice is backing a prominent contribution to peacekeeping, the Obama administration is seeking cuts elsewhere at the United Nations, delivering a series of sharply critical statements about the organization's failure to tighten its belt and cut waste in these hard times.

The debate is unfolding at a time when the United States and other major donors are facing major financial crises at home, prompting their envoys to press for deeper cuts while securing support for operations of critical national interest. The U.N.'s administrative and peacekeeping budget, however, has been expanded over the past decade, and shows little sign of contracting.

"We meet at a time of severe -- and worldwide economic challenge.... Member states around the world are under financial strain," said Joseph M. Torsella, the U.S. representative for U.N. Management and Reform, in a Sept. 29 speech calling for more belt-tightening before the U.N.'s main budget committee. "That is the simple reality we face, all of us: in a time of scarce resources, the United Nations cannot afford business as usual. But that unfortunately, is exactly what is represented in this budget."

The United Nations currently has about 120,000 peacekeepers serving around the world at a cost of more than $8 billion, with about 27 percent of that amount paid by the United States. Indeed, those costs don't even include a series of expensive "special political missions" in Afghanistan($200 million), Iraq ($200 million) and now in Libya ($10 million in start-up costs) that are favored by the United States. (The U.S. pays only about 22 percent of the costs for these missions.)

The missions in Afghanistan and Iraq are unpopular, however, among developing nations, who say the United States, Britain, and France get a discount because the operations are funded through the U.N.' regular budget. (Under a highly complex set of U.N. budget rules, the five permanent members of the Security Council -- the United States, China, Russia, France, and Britain -- have to pay a premium on peacekeeping missions, because of their special role in establishing them.) But now budget strains are bringing the United States and its allies at the U.N. into conflict, as competition for scarce resources increases. And even more draconian budget cuts may be coming.

"We're gearing up for a big -- cross-the-system-wide -- fight over the budget, and the peacekeeping stuff will be part of that," said Bruce Jones, the director of NYU's Center on International Cooperation. "There will be a decreasing budget one way or another [because of the] financial crisis. Nobody has any money left."

France, which oversees the U.N. mission in Ivory Coast, has been engaged in a running competition with the United States over resources.

In a cost-cutting effort, the U.N. Security Council decided six years ago to pass a resolution requiring the United Nations to share peacekeeping personnel and equipment among the three West African missions in Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Ivory Coast. The deal has led to enormous friction between the United States and France, which has sought periodically to borrow for use in the Ivory Coast three Ukrainian-piloted attack helicopters, which are based in Liberia.

The arrangement has not always gone smoothly.

In 2006, the United Nations made a request for a battalion of Liberia-based peacekeepers, plus a team of 140 police officers, to assist the U.N. mission in Ivory Coast, which had come under attack by forces close to then President Laurent Gbagbo. They only secured the support of a much smaller company of peacekeepers.

The United States allowed the Liberian-based helicopters to be used in a French-led military offensive that toppled Gbagbo's government earlier this year, after he refused to accept defeat in U.N-certified elections. But U.N. diplomats say the United States still dragged its feet. "This time took a couple of weeks longer than it should have," said a council diplomat.

A senior U.S. official said that French complaints about American stinginess are a "bit galling," given that the United States has allowed the French to use the helicopters for the better part of a year, and only demanded them backas Liberia headed towards a landmark second presidential election. "We have been very flexible," the official said. "The French took the view that these were their helicopters.

The United States has long historical links to Liberia, which was settled by freed American slaves. And Washington has resisted a European push for further U.N. troop reductions in the U.N. mission in Liberia, which stands at more than 7,000 international blue helmets, down from more than 15,000 in 2006. In September, Rice blocked an amendment by the Security Council's four European governments -- Britain, France, Germany and Portugal -- to consider carrying out a review of the costly U.N. peacekeeping mission in Liberia, with a view to trimming costs.

"We are not ready to predetermine Security Council actions on so important a matter as UNMIL's drawdown, given uncertainties surrounding the election and tensions in the region," Rice told the council after the vote, expressing hope she could consider cuts next year. "Now is not the moment to impose rigid timelines on UNMIL."

The U.S. refusal to wait for a review of the mission's mandate infuriated European delegations, who took a veiled swipe at the Americans in their explanations of the vote. "We are disappointed that Resolution 2008 did not take up amendments that a number of Security Council members put forward" to review the authorized military and troop strength in Liberia by May 30, 2012," said Britain's U.N. ambassador Mark Lyall Grant, "We do not expect any peacekeeping mission to be exempt from regular review by this council."

The tone has been sharp. Earlier this year, Lyall Grant also raised concerns about a decision to authorize and fund the deployment of 4,500 Ethiopian peacekeepers to Abyei, disputed territory that straddles the borders of Sudan and South Sudan.

"Why do we need so many troops?" Lyall Grant asked in a closed-door session of the Security Council, according to two diplomats who were in the room. It only required 10,000 British colonial soldiers, he quipped, to administer India. An Indian envoy responded that Britain had not been engaged in a state building effort.

British officials maintain that their concern is not limited to costs, but to the wisdom of maintaining large foreign peacekeeping missions in countries that are no longer at war, and no longer need foreign military assistance. Haiti, for example may be economically distressed and still recovering from the devastating 2010 earthquake, but it is not at war and still hosts some 12,000 U.N. peacekeepers. Britain believes its time to bring the blue helmets home.

"There are worrying reports that many ordinary Haitians increasingly see MINUSTAH as an occupying force," said Philip Parham, Britain's deputy U.N. ambassador. "We believe the continued presence of large number of troops is counter-productive and police officers, whether from UNPOL, or ideally the Haitian National Police, would be seen as a more sensitive and low-key presence on Haiti's streets."

The United Nations, backed by the United States, plans to reduce the size of the force in Haiti to about 8,000 troops, but will maintain a robust peacekeeping force to fill the vacuum left by a national police force that is incapable of taking full responsibility for security. Jeffrey DeLaurentis, the U.S. ambassador for special political affairs at the United Nations, insisted that the peacekeepers remain with "strong rules of engagement...to deal with a stable but fragile security situation in Haiti. The United Sates believes that any determination of the future size of MINUSTAH forces must be based on security conditions on the ground."

The United States has long had interests in the fate of Haiti, an island nation located some 700 miles southeast of the coast of Florida. The country has sent large numbers of immigrants to the United States, particularly during periods of violence and political instability. Britain, on the other hand, has few vital national security interests in Haiti.

Rice was even blunter. If the British don't think a peacekeeping force is appropriate for Haiti, they "shouldn't have voted to authorize it in the first place, because the nature of it hasn't changed. The Haitian people and the Haitian government are not asking for it to leave now."

Follow me on Twitter @columlynch

United Nations bets it all on Australia's Carbon Tax (millions of $$$ spent from UNEP and GEF to sponsor Tax in Australia)

Carbon tax is Prime Minister Julia Gillard's 'foreign plan', Tony Abbott says

Click here for story on dailytelegraph.com.au
Julia Gillard

Necessary tax ... Gillard said the next decade will be difficult without a carbon tax. Source: The Daily Telegraph

THE carbon tax is Julia Gillard's "foreign content plan", according to Tony Abbott, who said today the Coalition would continue fighting the tax even though it is destined to pass parliament.

The Gillard Government’s clean energy draft laws are expected to sail through the lower house on Wednesday, before heading to the Senate where they will be voted on some time next month.

The Opposition Leader this morning continued his attack on the Prime Minister, ahead of Wednesday’s vote.

“We’re going to give it a very good fight and you know this carbon tax is Julia Gillard’s foreign content plan because it will put Australia’s manufacturing at a permanent competitive disadvantage,” he told Channel Nine.

“So, she was talking about supporting local manufacturing last week, this week she wants to pass through the parliament a carbon tax that will permanently damage it and, as I said, it’s her foreign content plan for the goods we buy.”

A new manufacturing industry group – which has brought together a number of large companies including BlueScope Steel, Boral and Amcor – has also criticised the carbon tax, saying it should be deferred.

Manufacturing Australia’s executive chairman, former Reserve Bank board member Dick Warburton, said it seemed “quite wrong” to introduce the carbon tax “until we have a clear picture of what is going on in the rest of the world”.

“In fact countries are actually pulling out of carbon taxes and (emissions trading schemes) and therefore for us to go ahead with very little protection of the emissions at a distinct disadvantage to our economy just doesn’t seem right,” he told ABC Radio.

However a new report, released by Climate Change Minister Greg Combet today, shows climate change is putting at risk alpine water that is worth $9.6 billion a year to the Australian economy.

The Australian Conservation Foundation said the report underlined the urgent need to cut greenhouse pollution.

``The snow-capped peaks of the Australian Alps are a rare and beautiful thing in our mostly dry continent, but they could be gone by the middle of this century if we let climate change continue unabated,'' ACF chief executive Don Henry said.

``This report shows again how vital it is that our federal parliamentarians get on with the job of putting a price on carbon pollution - the primary driver of climate change.''

Meanwhile the government is furiously trying to avoid embarrassment on the issue of asylum seekers.

The government is just on vote away from having the numbers to change its migration laws and resurrect its controversial Malaysia people-swap deal.

Only WA Nationals MP Tony Crook – who sits on the crossbenches – is undecided on the issue. If he sides with the government it will hardly matter, since the Coalition and the Greens will vote down the legislation in the Senate.

But if Mr Crook sides with Mr Abbott in the lower house, it would be the first time in 80 years that a government loses a vote on legislation in the House of Representatives.