Energy Minister Chris Bowen sharply confronted Channel Seven journalist Liam Bartlett during a heated press conference, ordering him to ‘sit down’ amid intense questioning on Australia’s renewable energy strategy.
The Spark of Confrontation
Bartlett challenged Bowen on the government’s commitment to renewables amid global conflicts and the nation’s dependence on fossil fuels. ‘Hasn’t this war shown us that your obsession with renewables will only lead us down the track to another energy crisis?’ he pressed.
Bowen rejected the question’s premise outright. ‘That’s a pretty loaded comment, not a question,’ he responded, defending renewables as a reliable long-term option. ‘Renewable energy is secure. The Australian sun cannot be interrupted by a war or anything else,’ Bowen stated. He highlighted the stability of solar power, noting it travels 150 million kilometers from the sun, unlike vulnerable routes such as the 150km Strait of Hormuz.
Escalating Exchange
Bartlett persisted, claiming the government was ‘playing catch-up’ during the crisis. Bowen countered that supply chains remained unaffected. ‘Not a single ship expected to arrive in Australia has been interrupted,’ he affirmed.
Tension rose as Bartlett demanded Bowen’s resignation and complained about access. ‘I’ve been trying to ask you questions since January… Why can’t you sit down and answer open, honest questions?’ the journalist said.
Bowen accused Bartlett of disrupting proceedings. ‘I’ve held a press conference every day. This is the first press conference you’ve been to,’ he replied. ‘I think you need to show a bit more respect to your colleagues.’
Bartlett then labeled Bowen hypocritical for investing billions in green infrastructure. ‘Your focus has been wholly and solely spending billions of dollars we haven’t got on questionable green infrastructure… You’re totally hypocritical on this, Minister,’ he charged.
‘That’s a comment, not a question,’ Bowen shot back, directing Bartlett to sit down and accusing him of grandstanding. ‘What are you scared of?’ Bartlett retorted. Bowen reiterated his daily briefings, noting it was Bartlett’s first attendance.
Bowen’s Defense of Energy Transition
Undeterred, Bowen reaffirmed the strategy’s merits. ‘Net zero and climate action are unquestionably in Australia’s economic best interests,’ he declared. He emphasized Australia’s rapid progress, stating the nation was ‘absolutely blitzing it’ on renewables and adding more batteries to the grid proportionally than any other country.

