Camera IconChris Bowen has doubled down on Australia’s COP role, defending travel and staffing expenses. Credit: Nikki Short NewsWire/NCA NewsWire

Chris Bowen has accused the Coalition of being unpatriotic as he defends travel expenses and staffing costs for his role as the president of negotiations for the United Nations climate talks this year.

The Energy Minister said the nearly $150 million allocated to his COP duties was “very good value for money” compared with other international forums Australia has led in the past.

He also took a swipe at shadow minister Dan Tehan for questioning the cost, claiming the Liberal had done far more extensive travel in his final year as a minister.

“Whenever Australia steps up internationally and chairs a big international meeting, it does come with some expense,” Mr Bowen told reporters.

He cited the $400 million cost to host the G20 in 2014 and $330 million for APEC in 2007.

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By contrast, Australia’s role here is costing $50 million in direct COP costs as part of a $150 million investment in climate initiatives across the Pacific.

Camera IconMinister for Climate Change Chris Bowen. Credit: MICK TSIKAS/AAPIMAGE

Australia lost the bid to host the conference in Adelaide, instead coming to an agreement with Turkey that it would host the summit and Mr Bowen would be the president of negotiations.

“This is unquestionably in Australia’s best interest to step up and play an outsized role in the world,” Mr Bowen said.

“We believe Australia having more influence is a good thing. The Coalition believes Australia having more influence is a bad thing.

“A patriot party would embrace this. A partisan party would reject it.”

Documents obtained by The Australian under freedom of information laws show the department spent $485,602 for staff to travel to Turkey, Fiji, Germany and Korea in January and February on trips relating to the UN negotiations, the newspaper reported.

Mr Bowen said there were 30 bureaucrats in his department’s COP presidency unit, all of whom were involved in climate discussions anyway.

He said his only overseas trip so far this year was to Denmark last week, for the regular Copenhagen pre-COP ministerial meeting.

The minister labelled Mr Tehan “the biggest hypocrite in the federal parliament” on travel costs.

“In his last year as minister, he went to France, Singapore, Vietnam, Korea, Japan, United States, Indonesia, India, United Arab Emirates, France again, Italy, Belgium, United Kingdom, and the Maldives twice at taxpayer expense,” Mr Bowen said of his opponent.

“Now, if Mr Tehan’s going to criticise me for federal travel, for ministerial travel, he needs to justify why was he in all those countries at taxpayer expense in his last year as minister, including on the VIP, on the Royal Australian Air Force plane, at the cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars in those last period as minister.

“Now, if he wants to have a debate about international travel, I’ll have it with him. I didn’t seek it. I’d rather debate policy.”

Mr Tehan was the trade minister in the final years of the Morrison government, a role that typically involves a lot of international travel for in-person negotiations.

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