18/03/2026

Australia’s Fossil Fuel Subsidy Paradox: Billions flow to coal, oil and gas as governments promise a clean energy future - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Key Points
  • Australian governments provide billions annually in fossil fuel subsidies [1]
  • The diesel fuel tax credit scheme is the largest subsidy [2]
  • Subsidies now exceed $16 billion a year across governments [3]
  • Critics say subsidies undermine climate policy goals [4]
  • Supporters argue subsidies protect regional industries and jobs [5]
  • Debate intensifies as Australia faces a rapid global energy transition [6]

On a dusty coal haul road in Queensland’s Bowen Basin, trucks the size of houses move slowly through the red earth.

Each burns thousands of litres of diesel a day, fuel partly underwritten by Australian taxpayers.

Across federal and state budgets, billions of dollars flow quietly each year to support fossil fuel production and use.

At the same time, governments promise voters a future powered by clean energy.

The contradiction sits at the centre of Australia’s climate debate.

A Quiet Stream of Public Money

Australian federal and state governments together provide an estimated $16.3 billion a year in subsidies and tax concessions to fossil fuel industries.[1]

The figure includes direct spending, tax breaks and concessions for fuel used in mining, transport and heavy industry.

Researchers estimate this support equals roughly $31,000 every minute of the year.[1]

Most Australians never see the payments, because they appear in budget papers as tax arrangements rather than direct grants.

Yet their scale rivals some of the country’s largest social programs.

The Diesel Rebate at the Centre

The largest subsidy is the federal Fuel Tax Credit Scheme, which refunds fuel excise to industries that use diesel away from public roads.[2]

The program is expected to cost about $10.8 billion in a single financial year.[2]

Mining companies, agricultural producers and construction firms are among the biggest recipients.

The scheme dates back decades and was designed to ensure industries did not pay road taxes for fuel used off road.

Critics now argue it has evolved into a large subsidy for fossil fuel consumption.

Climate Policy Meets Budget Reality

The subsidies exist alongside ambitious national climate targets.

Australia has committed to cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 43 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030.

Yet economists and climate analysts say fossil fuel subsidies can slow the transition to cleaner energy.[4]

Lower fuel costs encourage continued reliance on diesel and other carbon intensive energy sources.

That dynamic complicates efforts to reduce emissions in sectors such as mining, transport and agriculture.

Regional Economies and Political Pressure

Supporters of the subsidies say the policies protect regional industries that underpin Australia’s economy.[5]

Mining and agriculture rely heavily on diesel powered machinery that currently has few affordable alternatives.

Industry groups warn that removing fuel credits could increase production costs and weaken export competitiveness.

In resource regions, these arguments carry political weight.

Communities built around coal mines or gas fields often view the subsidies as essential economic support.

A Growing National Debate

The issue has drawn increasing scrutiny from economists, climate experts and sections of the business community.

Several policy groups argue the subsidies distort markets by favouring fossil fuels over emerging clean technologies.

Some companies in the resources sector have also begun calling for reform as they invest in renewable energy and green hydrogen.

International agreements have added pressure.

Many countries, including Australia, have pledged to phase out what they describe as “inefficient” fossil fuel subsidies.[3]

The Energy Transition Question

The debate arrives as global energy markets begin to shift.

Government modelling suggests the value of Australia’s coal and gas exports could fall sharply in coming decades as countries move toward net zero emissions.[6]

At the same time, demand for minerals used in renewable technologies is rising rapidly.

Some analysts argue redirecting subsidies toward clean energy infrastructure could accelerate that transition.

Others warn that rapid policy shifts could disrupt industries that still employ tens of thousands of Australians.

Conclusion

Australia’s fossil fuel subsidies reveal a deeper tension in national climate policy.

Governments promise a rapid transition to renewable energy while maintaining financial support for industries that produce coal, oil and gas.

Part of the reason lies in economic reality.

Fossil fuels remain a major source of export income, government revenue and regional employment.

Another reason lies in political caution.

Energy transitions reshape economies slowly, and governments often prefer gradual change over abrupt disruption.

Yet the scale of the subsidies raises difficult questions.

Every dollar spent supporting fossil fuels is a dollar not invested in renewable energy, energy efficiency or climate resilience.

For some economists the issue is not only environmental but fiscal.

They argue that removing subsidies could free billions for public services or climate adaptation.

For industry groups the concern is different.

They warn that rapid changes could damage sectors that still anchor Australia’s export economy.

The tension is unlikely to disappear soon.

As climate targets tighten and global markets shift, Australia will face a fundamental policy choice.

Whether governments continue subsidising fossil fuels, or begin redirecting those funds toward the industries of a low carbon future, remains an open question for the decade ahead.

References

  1. Australian fossil fuel subsidies growing faster than NDIS, hitting $16.3 billion in 2025–26
  2. Australian governments subsidising fossil fuel use by more than $30,000 a minute
  3. Fossil Fuel Subsidies in Australia 2025
  4. Fossil fuel subsidies hit $14.5 billion in 2023–24
  5. Fuel tax credits scheme faces scrutiny
  6. Treasury modelling on Australia’s fossil fuel export outlook

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17/03/2026

The Tipping Point Problem: Why the World Is Running Out of Room to Manage Climate Change - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Key Points
  • The global mean temperature for 2024 reached 1.55°C above pre-industrial levels, surpassing the Paris Agreement's 1.5°C aspirational threshold for the first time in a calendar year.1
  • Climate scientists warn that tipping points, once crossed, trigger self-reinforcing feedbacks that can accelerate warming beyond human capacity to manage or reverse.2
  • The Great Barrier Reef suffered its most spatially extensive mass coral bleaching on record in 2024, with coral cover declining by up to 30 per cent across entire regions in a single year.3
  • Australian governments collectively subsidised fossil fuel producers and major users to the value of $14.9 billion in 2024-25, a figure rising year on year despite mounting climate costs.4
  • The Global Catastrophic Risks 2026 report identifies a deep governance failure, warning that humanity is managing a non-linear planet with institutions designed only for linear, incremental change.5
  • Preventing catastrophic climate change will require not only rapid emissions reductions but a fundamental restructuring of global governance to confront vested interests and align economic priorities with planetary boundaries.6

For decades, climate scientists have warned that warming the planet is not a simple, smooth process. 

Push the Earth's systems hard enough, and they push back, accelerating change in ways that no international agreement was designed to handle. 

A landmark report now puts that warning in blunt, institutional terms: humanity is governing a non-linear planet with instruments built for a more predictable world.

The Global Catastrophic Risks 2026 report, produced by the Global Challenges Foundation and authored by experts including University of Oslo governance researcher Manjana Milkoreit and climate scientist Eva Mineur, identifies catastrophic climate change as the foremost of five civilisation-level threats facing humanity today. 

The report does not merely rehearse familiar emissions data. It argues that the architecture of global climate governance, from the Paris Agreement to successive UN Climate Conferences, is structurally incapable of managing the cascading, non-linear disruptions that accelerating warming is already setting in motion.5

A Threshold Already Crossed

The numbers at the start of 2026 leave little room for measured optimism. Every year between 2015 and 2024 ranked among the ten warmest in recorded history. 

The global mean temperature for 2024 reached 1.55°C above the 1850-1900 pre-industrial average, according to the World Meteorological Organisation, breaching the 1.5°C threshold that the Paris Agreement had set as its most ambitious target.1

One year above that threshold does not constitute permanent overshoot. The science is clear on this point. But it illustrates how rapidly the margins have narrowed. The report's authors write that each additional fraction of a degree "narrows the space for stability" in ways that are not always visible until a system fails. The risk is not just continued warming; it is cascading disruption.2

That disruption is already arriving. At 1.5°C of sustained warming, climate models project dramatically more frequent and severe extreme weather events. At 3°C, entire regions could shift to climate conditions unseen for millions of years, with sea-level rise, crop failures and lethal heat rendering large parts of the planet effectively uninhabitable. Mass displacement on that scale would overwhelm political systems, international institutions and the concept of managed adaptation altogether.

The Mechanics of a Tipping Cascade

What distinguishes catastrophic climate risk from ordinary environmental degradation is the concept of tipping points: thresholds beyond which self-reinforcing feedbacks take over, driving further change independent of human emissions. Melting Arctic ice reduces the surface reflectivity of the planet, absorbing more heat. Thawing permafrost releases stored methane. Dying rainforests shift from carbon sinks to carbon sources. Each of these processes, once triggered, makes the next tipping point more likely.

The Global Catastrophic Risks 2026 report draws directly on the Global Tipping Points Report of 2025, which found that coral reefs have already passed their tipping point and could functionally collapse within a decade without coordinated global action to bring temperatures back below 1.0°C in the longer term.2 

The critical word in that sentence is "functionally." A world without functioning coral reef ecosystems is not a world with one fewer natural wonder. It is a world in which hundreds of millions of people lose access to fisheries, coastal protection and the marine biodiversity on which those services depend.

Milkoreit, in a conversation accompanying the report's release, observed that climate governance was never designed for this kind of non-linear disruption. The institutions managing climate risk were built to handle gradual, predictable change. Tipping points are neither gradual nor predictable. They produce sudden, irreversible shifts, and the governance systems meant to prevent them have no binding ecological red lines, no global institution specifically tasked with safeguarding Earth system resilience.5

Australia's Reef: A Live Experiment in Tipping-Point Science

No place in the world illustrates the tipping-point problem more vividly than the Great Barrier Reef, which stretches for more than 2,300 kilometres along Australia's Queensland coast and supports an estimated 1,500 species of fish and 400 types of coral.

In early 2024, the reef suffered the most spatially extensive mass coral bleaching event in recorded history. The Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS), which has monitored the reef since 1986, reported that the bleaching affected all three regions of the system simultaneously, with high to extreme bleaching prevalence across the majority of surveyed reefs. The primary driver, AIMS scientists concluded, was climate change-induced heat stress from record ocean temperatures.3

The consequences were severe and rapid. Coral cover declined by between 14 and 30 per cent across entire regions in a single year, with some individual reefs losing more than 70 per cent of their coral cover compared to 2024 survey levels. Northern GBR cover fell from 39.8 per cent to 30 per cent, recording the largest single-year decline since monitoring began. 

In early 2025, a sixth consecutive mass bleaching event occurred, focused on the Northern GBR and parts of western Australia, where a marine heatwave produced water temperatures 3°C to 4°C above normal along the Kimberley coast.3

The Climate Change Authority has noted that globally, coral reefs are projected to decline by 70 to 90 per cent if warming remains at 1.5°C for an extended period. At 2°C, up to 99 per cent of corals could be lost or fundamentally altered. The GBR's recovery windows are visibly shrinking with each successive bleaching season.3

For the roughly 60,000 people employed in the Great Barrier Reef's tourism and fishing industries, the ecological deterioration is already an economic one. For coastal communities in the Torres Strait and Cape York Peninsula, it is more fundamental still: the reef provides food, cultural identity and physical protection against storm surge. Its decline is not an abstract environmental statistic.

The Governance Gap: Fragmented Policies, Cascading Risks

The Global Catastrophic Risks 2026 report reserves some of its most pointed analysis for the structural inadequacies of the current governance framework. The Paris Agreement, it argues, remains the indispensable foundation of global climate diplomacy. But successive UN Climate Conferences have produced incremental commitments that collectively fall well short of what the science demands.6

The report identifies four distinct dimensions of governance failure. Climate policy remains fragmented from related domains, including biodiversity, energy, food and finance, despite deep interconnections between them. Unequal access to finance and technology limits the capacity of lower-income countries to transition away from fossil fuels or adapt to impacts they did not cause. 

A leadership gap persists, with political courage to confront vested interests in chronic short supply. And there are no binding ecological red lines: no global institution is charged specifically with protecting Earth system stability as a whole.

"We are governing a non-linear planet with institutions designed for linear change," the report's authors write. "That is the major reason for governance failure."5

The consequences of that failure are not evenly distributed. The harshest climate impacts fall on those least responsible for cumulative emissions: low-income communities, small island nations, Indigenous populations in vulnerable coastal and arid regions. The moral and political tension embedded in that asymmetry, the report argues, will itself destabilise governance unless addressed through equitable finance and shared accountability mechanisms.

Australia's Subsidy Paradox

Australia's climate position illustrates the governance gap in precise and measurable terms. The country has committed, under its updated Nationally Determined Contribution submitted in September 2025, to reducing emissions by 62 to 70 per cent below 2005 levels by 2035, with a long-term net zero target of 2050.

Yet at the same time, Australian governments collectively provided $14.9 billion in subsidies to fossil fuel producers and major users in 2024-25, a 3 per cent increase on the previous year, according to The Australia Institute's annual subsidy audit. 

The federal government's Fuel Tax Credits Scheme alone cost $10.2 billion, returning fuel tax to major diesel users including multinational mining companies.4 In 2025-26, that figure rose again to $16.3 billion, growing faster than the National Disability Insurance Scheme.

That sum equates to roughly $548 for every person in Australia, or $28,381 for every minute of every day. By contrast, the nation's Disaster Ready Fund, the primary mechanism for responding to climate-induced floods, fires and cyclones, held $4.75 billion in reserves. Australia's governments were committing approximately 14 times as much to the activities that cause those disasters as to the funds designed to manage their consequences.4

The Climate Change Performance Index rated Australia poorly in its 2025 assessment, noting that while the country's updated NDC represented progress, "the 70% upper end is for creating the perception of greater ambition than what is actually planned." Australia continues to approve new fossil fuel infrastructure, has no policy to cap fossil fuel exports, and has not joined the Beyond Oil and Gas Alliance.

The contradiction is stark. Australia simultaneously positions itself as a climate leader in Pacific diplomacy and one of the world's largest per capita producers and exporters of coal and liquefied natural gas. The two positions are not obviously reconcilable within the timeframes that climate science demands.

What the Science Demands

The Global Catastrophic Risks 2026 report does not take the position that catastrophic climate change is inevitable. Its core argument is more conditional and, in some respects, more challenging: the physical science of tipping points, cascading feedbacks and Earth system resilience is now sufficiently understood to define what avoiding catastrophe requires. The gap is not scientific. It is political, economic and institutional.

Preventing catastrophic outcomes requires, at minimum, rapidly peaking and then steeply reducing global emissions, financing the transition for lower-income countries, and restructuring governance to treat climate as what it is: a systemic stability issue with binding ecological limits. The report calls for stronger accountability mechanisms, binding red lines, integration of climate with biodiversity and food governance, and the political courage to confront vested interests who profit from the current trajectory.6

Carbon pricing, green financing and removal of fossil fuel subsidies are identified as immediate economic levers. But the report's authors are clear that these are necessary rather than sufficient. The deeper requirement is a form of governance that can anticipate non-linear futures rather than react to linear trends, and that can mobilise collective action at the speed those futures demand.

The Question That Remains Open

Australia enters this reckoning from an unusual position: a wealthy, high-emitting country with extraordinary exposure to climate impacts, an economy still structurally tied to fossil fuel exports, and a political culture that has historically struggled to sustain consistent climate policy across election cycles. 

The reef bleaching, the subsidies, the updated NDC, the Fuel Tax Credits Scheme, all of these sit within a single national story about priorities, vested interests and the distance between stated commitments and enacted policy.

The Global Catastrophic Risks 2026 report's most unsettling observation is not about emissions curves or temperature thresholds. It is about the relationship between governance and time. Climate tipping points operate on timescales that political systems typically cannot see or plan for. The reef does not wait for an election cycle. Permafrost does not respond to a ministerial announcement. The carbon already in the atmosphere will continue warming the planet for decades regardless of what parliaments resolve this year.

What remains genuinely open is whether the political imagination necessary to bridge that gap exists within democratic institutions, or whether it will need to be built, through new forms of accountability, new international frameworks and a willingness to treat the stability of the Earth's systems as something more than a line item in a budget. 

The answer to that question, the report's authors suggest, will be written not in scientific papers but in the decisions made in the next few years by governments, industries and electorates that still retain the power to choose.

References

1. World Meteorological Organisation, State of the Global Climate 2024 
2. Global Challenges Foundation, Global Catastrophic Risks 2026: Catastrophic Climate Change Overview 
3. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Annual Summary Report of Coral Reef Condition 2024/25 
4. The Australia Institute, Fossil Fuel Subsidies in Australia 2025 
5. Global Dispatches, How to Prevent Catastrophic Climate Change (interview with Manjana Milkoreit and Eva Mineur) 
6. Global Challenges Foundation, Global Catastrophic Risks 2026 (full report) 
7. Climate Change Authority, Understanding Climate Threats to the Great Barrier Reef 
8. Climate Change Performance Index, Australia Climate Performance Ranking 2025 
9. The Australia Institute, Australian Fossil Fuel Subsidies Growing Faster Than NDIS, Hitting $16.3 Billion in 2025-26 10. Global Tipping Points Report 2025 

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16/03/2026

Have your say on Canberra’s next Climate Strategy: It will be make or break - Gregory Andrews

Lyrebird Dreaming - Gregory Andrews

The ACT’s electric bus depot.
AUTHOR
 
Gregory Andrews
is:

The ACT Government is inviting submissions on its next Climate Change Strategy which will run out to 2035. Public consultation closes on 18 March 2026. 

I’ve already lodged a submission because this is one of those moments when a government process like this really matters. 

Decisions made in this strategy will shape not just how Canberra cuts emissions, but whether it remains a liveable, safe and resilient city in a rapidly changing climate.

The ACT has done important things already, and it should get credit for them. 

  • Its achievement of 100% renewable electricity was nationally significant. 
  • Its investment in electric buses is real and visible. 
  • The new Woden facility is Australia’s largest electric bus depot and a strong example of the kind of practical climate infrastructure governments should be building. It charges up to 100 electric buses.

But climate leadership isn’t something you get to claim forever because you were early in one area. Targets and announcements are one thing. Delivery is what matters.

That, and the latest climate science, are why this next strategy is so important. The ACT Government is not meeting its existing emissions reduction targets. Across the globe we are already feeling the impacts of the climate crisis. 

My submission argues that mitigation and adaptation both need equal and greater priority. Climate change is no longer a future emergency. It is already affecting how cities like Canberra function, how infrastructure performs, and how communities cope with heat, smoke, storms and flood. 

What Canberra does now on emissions reduction and climate adaptation will help determine whether it remains a safe, fair and liveable city for the people who live there.

That means stronger mitigation efforts. Transport is one of the hardest sectors. The ACT needs to keep pushing electrification, public transport and active travel. Electric buses are part of the story, but cycling is too. 

Canberra will not seriously cut transport emissions unless it improves cycling infrastructure with safer and more continuous lanes. Active travel is climate policy, public health policy and resilience policy at the same time.

It also means stronger adaptation. Buildings, precincts and infrastructure must be designed for the climate ahead rather than the climate behind us. A city cannot call itself climate ready if new assets remain vulnerable to foreseeable heat or flooding. 

The new CIT building in Woden, for example, was not designed for today’s climate. Its basement is closed and lifts are not fully functional because of flood damage. Adaptation needs to be built into planning, procurement and design from the start.

My submission also argues for a stronger strategy on waste reduction, recycling, organics and the circular economy. The ACT once had a ‘No Waste by 2010’ strategy but it quietly faded away.

And then there is Country. This strategy should have a much stronger Caring for Country lens. Not as symbolism and not as an afterthought. Caring for Country has practical relevance to biodiversity, urban cooling, water, fire, community wellbeing and long-term stewardship. 

A better climate strategy for Canberra will take First Nations knowledge, relationships and governance seriously.

So yes, I’ve made a submission because this feels like a make-or-break moment. The ACT has strong foundations. The real test now is whether climate ambition becomes delivery.

If you live in Canberra or care about its future, consider making a submission before 18 March. 

It does not need to be an expert paper. Simply tell the ACT Government clearly that climate action needs to be stronger, more practical and more honest about the scale of the challenge ahead. 

Canberra needs a plan that cuts emissions faster and adapts to the impacts already arriving.

 Gregory Andrews Climate Change Articles

15/03/2026

Victoria’s Climate Strategy Tests the Politics of Transformation - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Key Points
  • Victoria’s new strategy sets the pathway toward net zero emissions by 2045 1
  • The state aims to cut emissions 45–50% by 2030 and 75–80% by 2035 2
  • Rapid expansion of renewable energy and storage underpins the transition 3
  • Policies link climate action to jobs, industry and economic growth 4
  • Communities face both opportunities and tensions during the transition 5
  • The strategy frames climate policy as an economic and social transformation 6

Victoria has unveiled a sweeping climate strategy that seeks to reshape the State’s energy, economy and landscapes over the next decade.

The document, Victoria’s Climate Change Strategy 2026–30, sets out a roadmap to slash emissions, expand renewable energy and prepare communities for a hotter, more volatile climate.

Behind the policy language sits a deeper question that echoes across Australia. Can a prosperous industrial state rapidly cut climate pollution while maintaining economic growth and social stability?

A State already in transition

Victoria enters the next phase of climate policy with a record of measurable change.

State emissions have fallen about 31 percent since 2005 while the economy expanded by more than half, evidence that economic growth and emissions reduction can occur simultaneously 3.

The government credits renewable energy investment, energy efficiency programs and industrial reforms for the shift.

The new strategy builds on legislated targets that require emissions to fall 45 to 50 percent below 2005 levels by 2030 and 75 to 80 percent by 2035 2.

Ultimately, the state aims to reach net zero emissions by 2045, five years earlier than the national target 1.

Rebuilding the energy system

The heart of the strategy lies in a profound transformation of electricity generation.

Victoria plans to replace coal-fired power with renewable energy supported by storage, new transmission lines and offshore wind farms.

The state has legislated a target for 95 percent renewable electricity generation by 2035 alongside the largest energy storage targets in Australia 3.

The revival of the State Electricity Commission aims to accelerate publicly backed renewable projects while helping stabilise electricity prices.

Officials argue this approach can deliver cleaner energy while reducing long term costs for households and industry.

Transport and daily life

The strategy extends beyond electricity into the everyday rhythms of transport and housing.

Victoria aims for half of new light vehicle sales to be zero emission vehicles by 2030, part of a broader shift away from petrol and diesel engines 5.

Charging infrastructure and electrified public transport form part of that transition.

In homes, energy efficiency upgrades and minimum energy standards for rental properties aim to reduce energy bills while cutting emissions.

For many households the changes will appear gradually through new appliances, rooftop solar systems and quieter electric vehicles.

Climate policy as economic policy

Government planners increasingly frame climate action as an economic development strategy.

Modelling suggests Victoria’s economy could be tens of billions of dollars larger by 2070 if strong climate action aligns with global decarbonisation efforts 4.

The transition is also expected to create thousands of jobs across renewable energy, environmental restoration and low carbon manufacturing.

The state’s energy workforce alone could expand by more than 60 percent by 2040 3.

Supporters argue the shift mirrors earlier industrial revolutions that reshaped economies while generating new industries.

Nature and resilience

Climate policy now extends beyond emissions reduction into adaptation and ecosystem restoration.

The strategy includes programs to restore native vegetation, protect forests and strengthen biodiversity.

More than 20,000 hectares of native vegetation could be restored through initiatives such as the BushBank program 6.

Urban greening and tree planting programs aim to reduce extreme heat in rapidly growing suburbs.

These measures recognise that some climate change is already locked into the system.

Communities on the front line

Policy documents often speak in numbers, but climate transitions unfold in real communities.

Farmers negotiating wind turbine leases, electricians installing rooftop solar and families replacing gas heaters with heat pumps all become participants in the transition.

Some communities welcome renewable investment and the jobs it brings.

Others worry about transmission lines, land use and the pace of change in regional landscapes.

Managing those tensions may become one of the most complex challenges of the decade.

The national context

Victoria’s strategy sits within a broader national debate about Australia’s climate trajectory.

The federal government targets a 43 percent emissions reduction by 2030 and net zero by 2050.

Victoria’s earlier timeline places the state among the more ambitious jurisdictions in Australia.

That ambition also carries risk.

If technologies, infrastructure or political support falter, progress could slow.

Conclusion

Victoria’s Climate Change Strategy 2026–30 presents a vision of transformation rather than incremental change.

The plan recognises that climate policy now touches almost every part of the economy, from power generation and manufacturing to housing, transport and land management.

Its architects argue that acting early will position the state to thrive in a low carbon global economy.

Critics caution that large scale infrastructure projects, community concerns and economic uncertainty could complicate the transition.

Both perspectives reveal the deeper truth behind modern climate policy.

Decarbonisation is no longer simply an environmental objective.

It has become a test of how societies manage technological change, economic restructuring and political consensus at the same time.

Victoria’s strategy offers one answer to that challenge.

Whether it succeeds may depend less on policy design than on the willingness of communities, industries and governments to move together.

And in a warming world, the pace of that collective movement may matter more than anyone once imagined.

References

  1. Victoria’s Climate Change Strategy overview
  2. Victoria climate action targets
  3. Victoria’s climate change strategy progress data
  4. Economic benefits of meeting Victoria’s targets
  5. Victoria zero emissions vehicle roadmap
  6. Victoria’s Climate Change Strategy 2026–30 summary

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14/03/2026

Preparing the Next Generation: Climate Education in Australian Schools - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Key Points
  • Climate education is expanding across Australian schools through curriculum reform and new teaching resources.[1]
  • However it is not mandatory in every subject or year level, creating uneven teaching across states and schools.[2]
  • States such as Victoria and NSW are integrating climate science through policy frameworks and digital resources.[3]
  • Teachers increasingly draw on national programs and university resources to enrich lessons.[4]
  • Students learn climate science through interdisciplinary subjects and practical projects.[5]
  • Professional associations argue that clearer national requirements are needed for consistent climate education.[6]

On a warm morning in western Sydney, a Year 6 class gathers around a digital weather dashboard projected onto the classroom wall. 

The screen shows temperature trends across New South Wales, rainfall maps, and projected heatwaves for the coming decades.

For the students watching the coloured lines climb slowly upward, climate change is not an abstract debate. It is the future of the streets they live on.

Across Australia, teachers are experimenting with ways to help students understand the climate crisis through science, geography, economics, and even literature. Yet the national education system remains uneven, fragmented across states and sectors, and often uncertain about how directly the subject should be taught.

A Curriculum in Transition

Australia’s national curriculum includes “Sustainability” as a cross-curriculum priority, which means climate related concepts can appear in many subjects.[1] Students may encounter the greenhouse effect in science lessons, land management in geography, or renewable energy debates in economics classes.

However the curriculum rarely mandates explicit references to climate change in every year level. This flexibility allows schools to design localised lessons, but it also creates large differences in how deeply the topic is explored.

Researchers who study environmental education say the system reflects a broader tension. Climate change is widely recognised as a defining issue of the century, yet educational policy still treats it as one theme among many.

Why Climate Education Varies Across Schools

Climate change education is not taught uniformly in every Australian classroom. Part of the reason lies in the federal structure of education policy.

The national curriculum sets general learning outcomes, but each state decides how strongly to emphasise particular topics. Teacher workload also shapes what appears in classrooms.

Educators often report that crowded syllabuses leave limited time for extended climate units. Many teachers still rely on their own initiative, combining curriculum requirements with personal interest in environmental issues.

Victoria’s Climate Adaptation Strategy

In Victoria, the education system has taken a more structured approach. The Education and Training Climate Change Adaptation Action Plan 2022–2026 sets out policies that address both curriculum content and school infrastructure.[3]

The plan includes climate literacy programs for students and professional development for teachers. It also focuses on adapting school buildings to extreme heat and bushfire risk.

In this model, climate education extends beyond textbooks into the physical design of the school environment.

Local Climate Knowledge in New South Wales

In New South Wales, teachers often turn to the state government’s AdaptNSW platform for classroom resources.[3] The website provides climate projection maps that show expected temperature increases, rainfall changes, and coastal impacts across different regions.

These visualisations allow teachers to connect global climate science with local landscapes. A class in Newcastle might explore sea level rise along its coastline, while a class in Dubbo might analyse changing drought patterns in inland farming regions.

The ACT’s Cross-Curriculum Approach

The Australian Capital Territory takes a different path. Its Education Directorate emphasises sustainability as a core principle across subjects rather than a separate topic.

Students encounter climate related themes in science, civics, design, and even art. This integrated model ensures climate education appears regularly, even though the national curriculum lists sustainability as optional in some contexts.

Queensland’s Solar Schools

Queensland has experimented with another idea. Through programs such as Sustainable Schools, solar panels installed on school buildings double as learning tools.[4]

Students track electricity generation and calculate how much carbon pollution the panels prevent. For many children the school roof becomes their first introduction to renewable energy systems.

Energy data turns into mathematics lessons about graphs, statistics, and long-term environmental change.

Learning Beyond Science

Climate change education increasingly stretches beyond science and geography. In some secondary schools, economics classes analyse carbon markets and renewable investment.

Business studies courses examine how companies measure environmental risk. Society and Culture courses explore climate migration and global inequality.

This broader perspective helps students understand climate change as both a scientific and social challenge.

External Resources and Partnerships

Teachers rarely work alone when designing climate lessons. Many schools use programs such as CSIRO Sustainable Futures or the environmental education platform Cool Australia.[5]

Universities also contribute research-based resources. Projects like Monash University’s Climate Classrooms translate academic climate science into lesson plans suitable for secondary students.[4]

These collaborations help bridge the gap between cutting edge research and classroom teaching.

Teaching Hope in a Warming World

One of the greatest challenges for teachers is emotional rather than scientific. Young people increasingly express anxiety about climate change and its long term consequences.

Educators have begun emphasising “hope and agency” in lessons. Students design local climate solutions, plant biodiversity gardens, or analyse renewable energy policies.

These activities shift the conversation from despair toward problem solving.

Foundations in Primary School

In the early years of schooling the phrase “climate change” may appear less frequently. Instead teachers introduce related concepts such as ecosystems, endangered species, and sustainable energy.

A Year 3 class might study how forests absorb carbon dioxide. A Year 5 class might design a miniature wind turbine using recycled materials.

These lessons build the conceptual foundations for deeper climate science in secondary school.

Advanced Climate Science in Senior Years

By the time students reach Years 11 and 12 the subject becomes more technical. Courses such as Earth and Environmental Science ask students to analyse atmospheric data and global emissions trends.

Students examine climate models and interpret statistical correlations between temperature and greenhouse gases. Some schools even run projects where students analyse real time weather station data.

The exercise transforms climate science from theory into evidence.

The Teachers’ Call for Stronger Policy

Despite these innovations many teachers believe climate education still lacks national coherence. Professional groups such as the Australian Science Teachers Association and the Australian Geography Teachers Association argue that climate change should be explicit and mandatory across all year levels.[6]

They say a clearer framework would reduce uncertainty for teachers and ensure every student receives a consistent foundation in climate science.

Some educators also emphasise the importance of improving classroom conditions. As heatwaves become more frequent, thermal comfort inside school buildings increasingly affects students’ ability to concentrate.

References

  1. Australian Curriculum: Sustainability Cross-Curriculum Priority
  2. Australian Curriculum Overview
  3. Education and Training Climate Change Adaptation Action Plan 2022–2026
  4. Queensland Sustainable Schools Initiative
  5. CSIRO Sustainable Futures Program
  6. Climate Change Education: A Call to Action

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13/03/2026

When the Smoke Does Not Clear: War’s Long Carbon Shadow - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Key Points
  • Militaries and war likely account for around 5 percent of global greenhouse emissions, a footprint on par with major industrial sectors1
  • Recent conflicts show clear spikes in emissions from fuel use, fires, and destroyed energy infrastructure2
  • Bombed cities, depots, and factories release toxic pollution, creating “black rain,” soil damage, and long‑term ecosystem stress3
  • Reconstruction can emit more carbon than the fighting itself, yet it also offers a chance to build low‑carbon systems4
  • Military emissions remain under‑reported because global climate rules made disclosure voluntary and patchy5
  • Climate stress can heighten conflict risks, creating a dangerous feedback loop between warming, insecurity, and war6

The war no ledger counts

On a March morning in Tehran, the rain that fell from a low, dirty sky was not really rain.

Residents described droplets that smeared like oil on car windscreens and left black stains on balconies and skin.3 

The night before, a string of oil depots on the city’s edge had burned for hours after airstrikes, sending a column of soot and unburned hydrocarbons into the atmosphere.3

As emergency crews fought the flames, environmental officials warned that the downpour was laced with sulphur, nitrogen oxides and fine particulates, a kind of modern “black rain” that would seep into soil and waterways.3 

The city could see the damage in the sky, smell it in the streets, taste it with every breath.

For three decades, climate diplomacy has tried to put numbers on our warming future, yet one of the world’s largest emitters sits off to the side of the ledger, blurry at best, often invisible.

How big is war’s climate footprint?

Militaries travel by jet and armoured convoy, heat vast bases, consume steel and cement, and fight in ways that ignite cities, forests and fuel depots, but they remain only partially counted in national inventories.1 

Estimates compiled by Scientists for Global Responsibility and the Conflict and Environment Observatory suggest that everyday military activity accounts for about 5.5 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions, comparable to the entire aviation sector and larger than many countries’ economies.1

If the world’s armed forces formed a state, they would rank among the top handful of emitters on Earth, somewhere alongside Russia in the global league table.7 

And that figure does not yet include the surges triggered when war actually begins, from burning infrastructure to reconstruction.

The best current estimates place the combined climate impact of militaries and war at between roughly one per cent of global emissions for direct operational fuel use and about five to six per cent when supply chains, weapons production and infrastructure are included.1 

That makes war and preparation for war a carbon source on par with international aviation and shipping together.

Quantifying this impact has proven difficult for reasons that are as political as they are technical.

Why the numbers are so hard to see

Military fuel use is often classified, exercises and deployments cross borders, and there is no agreed method to account for the emissions from a missile strike that detonates a fertiliser plant or an artillery barrage that ignites a peat bog.10 

National inventories submitted to the UN can list defence fuel and electricity in broad categories that obscure specific operations.

Still, where researchers can see clearly, the picture is stark.

Analysts estimate that if militaries were ranked like countries, they would come in around fourth in the world, behind only China, the United States and perhaps India, which is more than most energy‑intensive industries can claim.7 

Mechanised warfare, with tanks, heavy armour and air campaigns, is particularly demanding, because jet fuel and diesel are energy dense and burned in extraordinary quantities across long supply lines.1

High‑tech militaries, such as those of the United States and other NATO members, tend to have more efficient engines and better logistics, yet their global reach, large fleets and sprawling bases mean efficiency gains are more than offset by scale.

Current wars, present‑tense emissions

The abstract numbers become less abstract in places like Ukraine.

Since Russia’s full‑scale invasion in 2022, a coalition of Ukrainian and European organisations has tried to count the war’s climate damage, from tanks to refineries.5 

Their most recent assessment estimated that in the first two years alone, the conflict generated around 175 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent, roughly the annual emissions of a mid‑sized industrial nation.5

The sources are varied.

Direct combat operations burn vast amounts of fuel, while artillery and missile strikes have destroyed energy infrastructure, triggering long‑lasting gas leaks and fires on offshore platforms.5 

Landscape fires, many started by shelling and left to rage unchecked, have burned more than 90,000 hectares in a year, more than double the pre‑war average, sending plumes of carbon and soot into the atmosphere.2

From Gaza to the Sahel: conflicts off the spreadsheet

In the Middle East, attacks on oil depots and power stations have produced similar patterns.

Fires at depots near Tehran released toxic smoke that turned rainfall black, while damage to water and electricity systems left neighbourhoods without safe supplies, forcing emergency reliance on diesel generators and tanker fleets.3 

In Gaza and parts of Syria and Iraq, strikes on power plants and pipelines have cut electricity from grids, pushing hospitals and households towards improvised, high‑emitting backup solutions.10

In Myanmar and across the Sahel, where satellite coverage and monitoring are patchier, reports describe scorched villages, burned cropland and degraded rangelands, yet the emissions rarely appear in national accounts.

Smaller, persistent conflicts in parts of Africa and Southeast Asia receive far less attention than headline wars, despite their cumulative footprint on land, air and water.

Black rain and broken ecosystems

When a refinery, fertiliser plant or petrochemical complex explodes, the damage unfolds in layers that run far beyond the initial blast radius.

Combustion sends carbon dioxide and short‑lived climate pollutants like black carbon into the air, while incomplete burning releases volatile organic compounds, sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxides that help form smog and acid rain.3 

Heavier hydrocarbons condense onto soot particles, hitching a ride back to the ground in oily, discoloured precipitation.

The “black acid rain” reported after depot fires near Tehran is a vivid example.

Residents faced a mix of carcinogenic compounds in the air, contaminated drinking water and crop damage as acidic droplets fell on fields and urban gardens.8 

Similar phenomena were observed around burning oil wells in Kuwait during the 1991 Gulf War, when smoke darkened the sky and residues accumulated in soil and surface waters.

Fire on the land, heat in the air

War‑related fires also contribute to regional warming, especially when they consume carbon‑rich ecosystems.

In Ukraine, shelling has ignited steppe grasslands and forested areas, releasing stores of carbon and damaging habitats that would otherwise act as weak but important sinks.4 

Soot from these fires can travel hundreds of kilometres, darkening snow and ice and accelerating melt.

On the ground, explosions and intense heat alter soil chemistry.

Cratered landscapes can see compaction, loss of organic matter and contamination with metals and explosive residues, all of which reduce long‑term productivity.10 

Agricultural recovery may take years, especially where unexploded ordnance and mines make remediation difficult.

In rivers, lakes and coastal waters, the sudden influx of chemicals, fuel and debris can nudge ecosystems towards acidification or eutrophication, stressing fish populations and drinking water supplies.

When infrastructure becomes fuel

Modern warfare increasingly targets the same networks that underpin low‑carbon transitions, such as power stations, transmission lines and pipelines.

Each destroyed facility is both a source of immediate emissions and a loss of future decarbonisation capacity.

Analyses of the war in Ukraine attribute tens of millions of tonnes of emissions to the destruction of civilian infrastructure in the conflict’s early months, when whole neighbourhoods burned and industrial sites were hit.5 

Fires at oil storage facilities and gas pipelines added additional pulses as hydrocarbons burned in the open air or leaked for days.5

Fires are the most visible component of wartime emissions.

Urban bombardment produces dense plumes of soot, while burning oil depots and refineries can create mega‑fires that rival some of the largest industrial accidents on record.3 

These events inject both carbon dioxide and aerosols into the atmosphere, with complex regional climate effects.

Reconstruction’s long carbon tail

Even when the guns fall silent, the climate cost of war continues to grow.

The emissions from rebuilding can exceed those from the fighting, especially where entire neighbourhoods or industrial belts must be reconstructed with concrete, steel and asphalt.4 

Cement alone accounts for around eight per cent of global carbon dioxide emissions, largely because producing the main binder in concrete requires heating limestone to high temperatures, which releases process emissions and burns fuel.9

In Iraq, years of occupation and conflict saw the rapid construction of blast walls and fortifications, each with an embodied carbon footprint from cement and steel, while post‑war rebuilding added another surge as damaged infrastructure was replaced.10 

In parts of Syria and the Balkans, reconstruction efforts have begun to experiment with lower‑carbon cement blends and more efficient building designs, yet progress is uneven.9

The central question is whether post‑war rebuilding can become an opportunity to leapfrog fossil‑fuel dependence rather than simply recreate the systems that existed before.

Analysts argue that if international reconstruction funds tied finance to low‑carbon power, efficient housing and resilient infrastructure, the long carbon tail of war could be shortened significantly.11 

Climate‑aligned rebuilding is not yet the default, but there are signs that financiers and development banks are starting to integrate emissions criteria into some post‑conflict plans.

The reporting gap that history built

The invisibility of military emissions is not an accident of methodology, it is the product of negotiation.

During talks on the Kyoto Protocol in the 1990s, the United States successfully pushed to exclude many categories of military emissions from binding targets and reporting, citing national security concerns.12 

Emissions from war itself, as well as from international bunker fuels used by militaries, did not have to be fully disclosed.

The Paris Agreement, adopted in 2015, removed the explicit exemption but replaced it with something more subtle.

Countries are now free to report military emissions, but they are not required to separate them clearly, and methods remain voluntary and inconsistent.13 

An analysis by civil society groups found that some major military powers failed to submit any up‑to‑date emissions inventory for the relevant cycle, while others reported implausible drops in military emissions during ongoing conflicts.14

Researchers estimate that a significant share, perhaps most, of global military emissions remain effectively invisible to policymakers because they are buried in aggregate energy use or not reported at all.1 

Proposals now circulating in climate and security circles call for mandatory, standardised reporting of military fuel use, supply chains and war‑related damage as part of future transparency rules.10

Wars, energy markets and strained resources

If military emissions sit in the shadows, the broader energy effects of war are more immediately visible on trading screens and household bills.

Conflicts that threaten oil and gas supply routes can send prices soaring, prompting governments to scramble for alternative sources.

The invasion of Ukraine in 2022 triggered a rapid reshaping of Europe’s energy system.

Russian pipeline gas fell sharply, replaced in part by liquefied natural gas imports, coal reactivation and, crucially, an accelerated build‑out of renewables and efficiency measures in several countries.2 

Analysts argue that the war both slowed and sped the energy transition, as emergency coal use rose in the short term while structural dependence on Russian gas eroded.2

Geopolitical instability often nudges governments towards short‑term energy security at the expense of long‑term climate commitments.

New fossil fuel investments justified as “temporary” can lock in infrastructure for decades, while defence supply chains, including steel, explosives and fuel refining, remain highly carbon intensive.10 

The more resources flow to armament, the less fiscal space may exist for clean energy, adaptation or loss and damage finance.

Budgets, bombs and missed opportunities

The relationship between conflict spending and climate investment is not purely arithmetic, but the tension is clear.

Global military expenditure has reached record levels in recent years, even as climate finance has struggled to meet pledged targets for mitigation and adaptation support in vulnerable countries.10 

Rising defence budgets can crowd out public funds for decarbonising transport, retrofitting homes or protecting coastlines.

Wars also reverberate through commodity markets.

Disruptions to oil, gas, fertiliser and grain exports from conflict zones can push up prices worldwide, with knock‑on effects for food security and political stability.15 

Governments facing angry voters over energy bills or food costs may hesitate to impose carbon prices or phase out fossil fuel subsidies.

At the same time, climate stress is emerging as a risk factor for future conflicts.

Assessments summarised in the latest IPCC reports find that higher temperatures, drought and extreme weather can exacerbate grievances, undermine livelihoods and contribute to violent conflict risk, particularly in parts of Africa and Asia where institutions are already fragile.15 

War feeds warming, which in turn can feed more insecurity.

Recovery, justice and watching the smoke

Ecosystems damaged by war can take years, sometimes decades, to recover.

Forests regrow slowly on shell‑scarred hillsides, wetlands clogged with debris struggle to filter water, and soils contaminated with metals or hydrocarbons may require costly remediation before they can support crops again.10 

In some post‑war landscapes, conservation groups have used demilitarised zones as unexpected refuges for wildlife, but these are exceptions rather than the rule.

There are also examples of deliberate environmental restoration built into recovery.

In the Balkans, international and local efforts have focused on cleaning industrial hot spots, improving wastewater treatment and upgrading power systems after the conflicts of the 1990s.11 

In Iraq and parts of Syria, projects to rehabilitate marshlands and contaminated sites have begun to reconnect communities with their ecosystems.10

The legal tools for holding combatants accountable for environmental harm remain weak.

International humanitarian law recognises some limits on “widespread, long‑term and severe” environmental damage, yet prosecutions are rare and thresholds high.10 

Campaigners argue for stronger norms that would treat large‑scale ecological destruction during war as a serious crime.

One promising frontier is real‑time environmental monitoring during conflicts.

Advances in satellite observation, open‑source intelligence and sensor networks could allow international bodies, journalists and civil society to track fires, pollution events and infrastructure damage as they occur.5 

If the world can see the smoke more clearly, it may become harder to ignore the warming it represents.

Conclusion: counting what we choose to see

In Tehran, the black rain eventually stopped, though the residues it carried into rivers, fields and lungs will linger far longer than the news cycle that briefly noticed them.

In Ukraine, the fires that trace the jagged front continue to burn, contributing to a tally of emissions that will shape the country’s climate future long after the last trench is abandoned.5 

In quieter conflicts that never make global headlines, forests are cleared, rivers polluted and communities displaced, leaving smaller but no less real scars.

War has always rearranged landscapes, destroyed cities and disrupted economies.

In a rapidly warming world, it also rearranges the atmosphere, pushing more carbon into a space already dangerously crowded with human exhaust.1 

The fact that so much of this remains off the books is a choice, not an inevitability, rooted in fears about transparency that now collide with the need for planetary accounting.

As climate negotiations edge toward tighter carbon budgets, the question is not only how many tanks or fighter jets a nation can afford, but how many tonnes of carbon its security doctrine quietly assumes.

If we began to count the full climate cost of war, from fuel depots to black rain, would we still make the same choices about what keeps us safe, or would our idea of security shift toward something less combustible and more compatible with a liveable climate?

References

  1. CEDARE, “Contribution of Military and War to Global Emissions” (summarising Scientists for Global Responsibility and CEOBS estimates)
  2. ClimaTalk, “How Are Wars Affecting Climate Change?”
  3. Thairath, report on oil depot fires, toxic smoke and black acid rain in Iran
  4. Ukrainian War Environmental Consequences Work Group, “Environmental Consequences of the War in Ukraine”
  5. Ecoaction et al., “Climate Damage Caused by Russia’s War in Ukraine”
  6. Earth.org, “Warfare Now Largest Source of Ukraine’s Annual Carbon Emissions”
  7. American Academy of Arts & Sciences, “The Environmental Impacts of Modern Wars”
  8. The Nation Thailand, “Black Acid Rain Hits Iran After Oil Depot Blasts”
  9. SAEA, “Syria Reconstruction as Cement Industry Lowers Carbon Footprint”
  10. Climate Diplomacy, “Regional Breakdown of the IPCC’s Warnings and What They Mean for Peace and Security”
  11. Climate Analytics, “Decarbonising Electricity, Cement, Iron and Steel, and Chemicals in the Western Balkans”
  12. Impakter, “Military Exemptions: How One of the World’s Largest Polluters Gets a Free Pass”
  13. Stop the War, “Silence on Military Emissions Reveals a Dangerous Blind Spot”
  14. Bombay Breed, “The One Emitter the Paris Agreement Forgot to Name”
  15. Climate Diplomacy, “What Does the Sixth IPCC Synthesis Report Say About Climate Security and Peace?”
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12/03/2026

When the Heat Takes the Day: A Third of Humanity Now Lives Under Life-Limiting Temperatures - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Key Points
  • Extreme heat now limits daily life for roughly one-third of humanity [1]
  • New research integrates seventy years of climate, population and physiological data [2]
  • Scientists measure safe human activity using metabolic equivalents, or METs [3]
  • Older adults now face about nine hundred hours of extreme heat annually [4]
  • Young adults experience roughly twice as many life-limiting heat hours as in the mid-twentieth century [5]
  • The most severe impacts occur across tropical and subtropical regions [6]

In the late afternoon in the Indian city of Ahmedabad, when the sun settles low over the Sabarmati River, the streets should be alive with motion. 

Vendors push carts of roasted peanuts and fruit while children chase cricket balls through narrow lanes. 

Instead, the city pauses. The heat presses down like a heavy curtain and people wait indoors for the sun to lose its strength.

For millions across the world, waiting has become part of daily life. A new global study suggests the reason is simple and troubling. Extreme heat is quietly reshaping the basic rhythms of human life. Conditions hot enough to restrict normal activity now affect roughly one-third of humanity.[1]

A Planet Where the Day Is Shrinking

For most of human history the length of a working day depended on sunlight and social custom. Farmers rose early to avoid the midday sun while labourers rested during the hottest hours. The new research suggests the climate itself is now shortening the usable hours of the day.

The study combines temperature observations with demographic data and a physiological model that estimates how much effort a human body can safely perform under certain conditions.[2] The result is a global map of livability measured not by comfort but by the ability to move, work or simply walk outside. Across large parts of the world that ability is shrinking.

When temperatures climb high enough, the body struggles to release heat through sweating and blood circulation. Core temperature begins to rise and fatigue sets in quickly. What begins as discomfort can escalate to heat exhaustion or heat stroke. At certain thresholds ordinary life becomes physically hazardous.

Measuring Human Limits

To quantify these boundaries researchers turned to a tool more familiar in sports science than climate research. The measure is known as a metabolic equivalent, or MET. A MET represents the energy the body expends during physical activity compared with resting metabolism.

Walking slowly requires about three METs while heavy labour such as digging or carrying bricks may demand six or more. By combining these values with temperature and humidity data scientists can estimate how much activity the human body can safely sustain.[3]

Under moderate conditions most daily tasks remain well within safe limits. Under extreme heat the margin disappears and even light exertion becomes risky. In the hottest environments researchers found the safe threshold for physical activity drops close to resting levels. The implication is stark because ordinary routines suddenly become dangerous.

A Steady Rise in Dangerous Hours

The study traces how these limits have shifted since the middle of the twentieth century. The pattern is clear across nearly every continent. Dangerous heat exposure has increased steadily as global temperatures have risen.

Older adults are now exposed to roughly nine hundred hours of extreme heat each year compared with around six hundred hours in 1950.[4] Age matters because the body’s ability to regulate temperature declines over time. Sweating becomes less efficient while cardiovascular strain increases.

Younger adults face a different pattern. Their physical resilience remains higher yet the duration of exposure has doubled in many regions. Researchers estimate that young adults today experience about twice as many hours of life-limiting heat as people did seventy years ago.[5]

Where the Heat Bites Hardest

The geography of the problem follows a familiar line on the map. Tropical and subtropical regions carry the heaviest burden. South Asia, the Middle East and parts of West Africa already experience temperatures that approach the limits of human tolerance during summer months.[6]

These are also regions where millions of people work outdoors in agriculture, construction and transport. For them extreme heat is not an occasional emergency. It is a daily constraint that shapes working hours and livelihoods.

In Pakistan and India the summer working day increasingly begins before sunrise. Construction crews pause during the afternoon and return after dusk. In parts of the Persian Gulf outdoor labour is banned during peak hours of summer. Similar adjustments are spreading across the world.

Southern Europe has experienced several record-breaking heat waves in recent years. Cities such as Athens and Rome have closed tourist sites during the hottest hours to protect visitors and workers. Climate change is therefore not only a story about storms or melting ice. It is increasingly about the basic conditions that allow people to live ordinary lives.

The Quiet Economics of Heat

Heat rarely leaves dramatic images of destruction. Instead, it erodes productivity and health in quieter ways. Outdoor labour slows while electricity demand rises as air conditioners work harder. Hospitals treat more cases of dehydration and heat stress.

The economic consequences are substantial. The International Labour Organization estimates that rising temperatures could reduce global working hours by the equivalent of tens of millions of full-time jobs by the end of this decade. Agriculture, construction, and transport remain especially vulnerable because they depend on physical effort in open air.

When the heat becomes dangerous work must stop. For low-income communities, that lost time often means lost income. In many countries, these economic losses accumulate quietly year after year.

Cities on the Front Line

Urban areas amplify the problem. Concrete, asphalt, and glass trap heat long after sunset, creating what scientists call the urban heat island effect. Night temperatures in large cities can remain several degrees warmer than surrounding countryside.

That difference matters because the human body relies on cooler nights to recover from daytime heat. Without that relief the stress accumulates. Heat related illness becomes more likely during extended hot periods.

Many cities are experimenting with solutions. Urban planners plant more trees, expand shaded streets and install reflective roofs. Some governments issue heat alerts similar to storm warnings. These measures reduce risk but cannot fully offset the warming trend.

Conclusion

The story of climate change typically unfolds through dramatic images such as collapsing glaciers or vast wildfires. 

Yet the most profound changes may occur quietly within the routines of daily life. A farmer begins work before dawn because midday has become unbearable, while a grandmother waits indoors through afternoons that once belonged to neighbourhood walks. A child learns that the safe time to play outside is shrinking each year. 

The research suggests these adjustments are not temporary responses to isolated heat waves but signs of a deeper shift between human bodies and the climate that surrounds them.

For centuries, societies adapted their rhythms to the seasons. Now the seasons themselves are changing. The question that lingers is not simply how hot the world will become. It is how much of the day, and how much of ordinary life, will remain comfortably within the limits of the human body.

References

  1. Nature Climate Change: Global exposure to extreme heat and limits to human activity
  2. IPCC Sixth Assessment Report: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability
  3. CDC: Heat Stress and Human Physiology
  4. Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change
  5. Nature: Increasing human exposure to extreme heat
  6. World Bank: Turn Down the Heat

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