15/05/2026

Burning Down Slowly: How Climate Change Is Remaking Life in Perth - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Perth’s long summer is becoming a test of who can still afford to stay cool.
The City is heating faster than its systems can adapt.
Key Points
  • Extreme heat is increasingly concentrated in Perth’s outer suburbs where tree canopy and cooling infrastructure remain scarce. 1
  • Declining rainfall has reshaped Perth’s water system and accelerated dependence on desalination. 2
  • Climate exposure increasingly overlaps with housing inequality, insecure renting, and ageing infrastructure. 3
  • Western Australia’s economy remains deeply tied to gas exports despite escalating climate risks. 4
  • Scientists warn south-west ecosystems face accelerating biodiversity loss from heat, drying wetlands, and marine warming. 5
  • Perth’s future resilience may depend less on emergency response than on how the city is designed over the next decade. 6

A city built for abundance enters an era of scarcity

By mid-afternoon in Perth’s north-eastern growth corridors, the air often feels trapped between dark roofs, wide roads, and unfinished verges. 

Temperatures can remain several degrees hotter than older coastal suburbs long after sunset. The heat lingers indoors. 

For decades Perth sold itself through sunlight, space, and suburban expansion. Climate scientists now describe south-west Western Australia as one of the world’s most vulnerable drying regions, with rainfall declines exceeding most comparable temperate zones.1 

The shift is already visible in daily life. Ambulance demand spikes during prolonged heatwaves. Schools close outdoor activities earlier. Construction workers start before dawn. Families crowd shopping centres simply to access air conditioning. 

Public debate still frames climate change as a future economic risk. In Perth, it increasingly resembles a public health crisis shaped by postcode.

Heat is exposing the geography of inequality

Perth’s hottest suburbs are rarely its wealthiest. Many outer-growth estates contain sparse tree canopy, limited public transport, and homes built rapidly during housing booms with little passive cooling. State government canopy mapping released last year showed average urban canopy across Perth and Peel at only 22%.6 

Inner western suburbs retain mature trees planted generations earlier, while newer developments often rely on small saplings struggling against expanding asphalt. Researchers have repeatedly linked extreme heat exposure with cardiovascular illness, respiratory stress, mental health deterioration, and higher mortality among elderly residents. 

National studies estimate heatwaves already cause more Australian deaths than any other natural hazard.7 Emergency physicians in Perth describe multi-day heatwaves as cumulative events. Patients arrive dehydrated after nights without sleep. Aged-care residents deteriorate after air conditioning failures. Ambulance ramping intensifies. 

Outdoor workers remain especially vulnerable. Construction crews, warehouse staff, delivery drivers, and emergency personnel often operate in temperatures above 40C while workplace protections largely depend on employer discretion. 

The city’s housing crisis compounds the danger. Renters frequently occupy poorly insulated homes where indoor temperatures remain unsafe well into the evening. Cooling costs can consume substantial portions of household income during summer. 

Across Perth, climate adaptation increasingly resembles a contest over access to shade, insulation, transport, and electricity. 

Perth’s water miracle came with escalating costs

Perth once relied heavily on rainfall flowing into dams from the Darling Range. That system has collapsed within a single lifetime. Since the 1970s, rainfall across south-west Western Australia has declined sharply while streamflow into Perth’s dams has fallen by roughly 80%.24 

The city now depends heavily on desalination and groundwater replenishment to maintain drinking supplies. The transformation has been technically impressive. Perth became an international case study in large-scale desalination long before many comparable cities accepted climate-driven water scarcity as structural rather than temporary. Yet desalination carries financial and energy burdens. 

Maintaining climate-independent water supplies requires expensive infrastructure, long-term energy commitments, and continued public investment.3 

Groundwater systems are also under pressure. Around Perth and Mandurah, declining recharge rates have forced authorities to rebalance extraction from stressed aquifers.4 

Scientists warn drying wetlands and reduced river flows threaten biodiversity as well as water security. Conflict over water allocation is beginning to sharpen. Mining, agriculture, residential growth, and industrial expansion increasingly compete for diminishing resources across the state. 

The tensions are not theoretical. Earlier this year, Traditional Owners accused Rio Tinto’s operations in the Pilbara of contributing to the drying of a culturally significant waterhole.8 

 A fossil fuel economy confronts a warming future

Western Australia remains economically tied to liquefied natural gas exports, iron ore production, and resource-intensive industry. That dependence shapes almost every climate debate in Perth. Governments continue presenting gas expansion as compatible with emissions reduction targets, arguing the industry underpins jobs, royalties, and energy security. 

Environmental groups counter that long-lived gas infrastructure risks locking the state into decades of higher emissions precisely as trading partners accelerate decarbonisation. 

The contradiction has become harder to ignore. Perth increasingly experiences the physical consequences of climate change while simultaneously benefiting economically from industries driving global emissions. Business leaders privately acknowledge another concern. International carbon border tariffs and stricter supply-chain rules could reshape export markets faster than Western Australia anticipates. 

A genuine transition would require more than renewable mega-projects. Economists argue the state must build processing, manufacturing, grid infrastructure, and long-term regional employment rather than relying solely on raw material exports. 

For workers in fossil fuel industries, climate politics often sounds abstract until discussions shift toward employment security. That tension helps explain why climate policy in Western Australia frequently moves slower than scientific warnings. 

The coastline is changing in plain sight

Along sections of Perth’s coastline, erosion already reshapes beaches familiar to generations of residents. Dunes retreat. Protective infrastructure expands. Storm surges increasingly threaten low-lying assets. Local governments face politically difficult questions about development approvals in vulnerable coastal areas. 

Expensive waterfront property still attracts investment even as sea-level projections become more alarming. Marine ecosystems are also under strain. Researchers linked recent marine heatwaves off Western Australia to mass fish deaths and severe ecological disruption.9 

The warming ocean affects tourism, fisheries, biodiversity, and coastal identity simultaneously. Perth’s relationship with the beach has always shaped how the city imagines itself. Managed retreat remains politically toxic in Australia. 

Yet planners increasingly acknowledge some coastal infrastructure may eventually become prohibitively expensive to defend. International examples from Miami, Jakarta, and parts of southern Europe show adaptation costs rise dramatically once retreat becomes unavoidable rather than planned.

The suburbs themselves are becoming climate infrastructure

Perth’s sprawling urban form magnifies climate exposure. Long commuting distances increase transport emissions while low-density development spreads heat-retaining surfaces across expanding corridors. Urban planners increasingly argue the city’s future resilience depends less on emergency management than on ordinary design decisions. 

Street trees, public transport, reflective surfaces, housing standards, and building orientation all influence survivability during extreme heat. Public frustration over disappearing greenery has become increasingly visible. Online discussions among Perth residents frequently describe newer suburbs as barren and difficult to inhabit during summer heat.10 

Climate adaptation can also deepen inequality. Wealthier households install solar panels, batteries, efficient cooling systems, and electric vehicles while lower-income residents remain exposed to rising power prices and inadequate housing. Some councils have begun experimenting with reflective road surfaces and expanded greening programs. 

Critics argue such measures remain fragmented compared with the scale of transformation required. Scientists warn that hotter nights may become one of Perth’s most serious long-term health threats. Human bodies recover poorly without overnight cooling. Sleep disruption affects productivity, chronic illness, mental health, and family stress. 

A city once designed around outdoor living now faces the possibility that summer afternoons may increasingly push residents indoors.

Climate pressure is reshaping political trust

Western Australians have historically supported resource development more strongly than many eastern states. Mining wealth built roads, hospitals, schools, and public services. Climate change complicates that political compact. 

Governments encourage adaptation while continuing to approve emissions-intensive projects. Public messaging often emphasises resilience without fully describing the scale of future disruption. Scientists and policy researchers increasingly warn adaptation planning still relies on conservative assumptions. 

Critics argue official projections sometimes underestimate worst-case risks involving simultaneous heatwaves, power failures, smoke exposure, and water stress. Local councils also vary sharply in preparedness. 

Wealthier municipalities generally possess stronger revenue bases and greater capacity to invest in cooling infrastructure, canopy restoration, and resilience planning. Indigenous leaders meanwhile continue pushing for greater recognition of traditional ecological knowledge, particularly in land management and fire mitigation. 

Some Indigenous-led programs have demonstrated strong results where conventional approaches struggled. The deeper challenge may be cultural. 

Perth remains emotionally attached to a twentieth-century development model built on cheap land, car dependence, abundant energy, and climatic stability. Those assumptions are beginning to fracture.

What a climate-resilient Perth might actually require

By 2050, Perth could become a global example of successful climate adaptation or a warning about delayed transformation. A resilient version of the city would likely look physically different from the Perth of previous decades. 

Denser housing near transport corridors. Larger urban forests. Strict minimum cooling standards for rentals and social housing. Expanded public transport reducing long suburban commutes. Water recycling and renewable-powered desalination would become ordinary infrastructure rather than emergency responses. 

Hospitals, schools, and aged-care facilities would operate through prolonged heatwaves and blackout scenarios. Economic resilience would depend on diversification beyond fossil fuel exports. That shift would require political honesty about industries likely to contract over coming decades. 

The alternative is visible already during severe heat events. Overstretched emergency systems. Rising insurance costs. Energy insecurity. Ecological decline. Working-class suburbs absorbing disproportionate risk. 

Perth still possesses substantial advantages. Wealth, technical expertise, renewable energy potential, and relatively strong institutions provide room to adapt. Time matters though. Climate systems do not negotiate with election cycles. 

The city’s future may ultimately depend on whether adaptation remains reactive and piecemeal or becomes the organising principle of how Perth builds, governs, and imagines itself.

References

  1. Western Australian Government: Climate change and waterways
  2. Department of Water and Environmental Regulation: Seasonal water and climate trends
  3. Made Possible by Water: Securing Western Australia’s water future
  4. Western Australian Government: Rebalancing our groundwater
  5. Water Corporation: Climate and the South West
  6. WA Government: Perth and Peel tree canopy data
  7. Monash University heatwave mortality study
  8. Reuters: Rio Tinto groundwater dispute
  9. The Guardian: WA marine heatwave impacts
  10. Perth residents discussing heat and canopy loss

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14/05/2026

Extreme Heat Is Redrawing Safety Boundaries Across Adelaide - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Adelaide’s climate divide is no longer a future threat but a present political test
Key Points
  • Adelaide’s hottest suburbs overlap with lower income communities and sparse tree canopy coverage 1
  • Public housing tenants face mounting exposure to dangerous indoor temperatures during prolonged heatwaves 2
  • Climate pressure on the Murray-Darling Basin is reshaping South Australia’s long-term water security debate 3
  • Insurance markets and coastal planning are quietly redefining which Adelaide communities remain economically viable 4
  • South Australia’s renewable energy transition has not translated into consistently lower household electricity costs 5
  • Scientists warn climate adaptation failures increasingly reflect governance choices rather than unavoidable disasters 6

The geography of heat

On a late January afternoon in Elizabeth Downs the asphalt shimmered above 44C while the nearest shaded park sat several streets away.

Ambulance crews moved between heat stress callouts across Adelaide’s northern suburbs as air conditioners strained against a grid carrying one of the state’s highest summer electricity loads.

Researchers at the University of Adelaide and state health agencies have repeatedly identified a pattern inside metropolitan heat data. The suburbs recording higher rates of heat vulnerability often share lower household incomes, weaker tree canopy coverage and older housing stock built before modern thermal standards.1

In wealthier suburbs along Adelaide’s eastern foothills broad streets remain lined with mature trees planted generations earlier. In outer growth corridors developers carved new estates into former farmland where dark roofs and exposed concrete absorb and retain heat long after sunset.

Public health specialists increasingly describe heatwaves as Adelaide’s deadliest climate disaster because fatalities often arrive invisibly inside homes rather than dramatic emergency scenes. South Australia’s chief public health warnings now focus not only on outdoor exposure but also indoor overnight temperatures that fail to cool safely.

Aged-care facilities and hospitals have quietly become frontline climate infrastructure. SA Health planning documents anticipate rising pressure on emergency departments as longer heatwaves intensify cardiovascular illness, kidney stress and respiratory complications among elderly residents.7

Low-income renters remain especially exposed because many older rental properties lack insulation, efficient cooling systems or energy upgrades. Tenants frequently ration electricity use during extreme heat because power bills compete against rent increases and food costs.

Researchers from the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute found Australians in energy poverty often endure indoor temperatures linked to worsening chronic illness and mental distress.2 Across Adelaide’s outer suburbs those risks increasingly overlap.

A city designed for another climate

Adelaide’s suburban form emerged during decades when planners treated extreme heat as occasional rather than structural. Wide roads, detached homes and sprawling developments assumed abundant cheap energy and predictable seasons.

Urban greening programs now attempt to retrofit resilience into landscapes already locked into heat exposure. The City of Adelaide and several metropolitan councils expanded tree planting strategies after research showed canopy coverage can reduce local surface temperatures by several degrees during heatwaves.8

Yet the distribution remains uneven. Wealthier councils often possess larger rate bases and stronger political capacity to fund greening projects while lower income growth corridors struggle to maintain open space and irrigation under budget pressure.

The tension exposes a larger political question beneath climate adaptation. Which neighbourhoods receive protection first when resilience itself becomes expensive.

In public housing the challenge is sharper. South Australia maintains thousands of ageing homes constructed long before modern thermal efficiency requirements, and retrofitting costs continue climbing alongside construction shortages.

Housing advocates argue adaptation policy still assumes households possess private financial buffers. For many renters the climate transition already feels privatised through electricity bills, insurance premiums and rising summer medical costs.

Water and the politics of survival

The River Murray still supplies much of Adelaide’s drinking water despite decades of warnings about over-allocation and climate volatility. During the Millennium Drought river flows fell dramatically while salinity risks intensified across sections of the Murray-Darling Basin.

South Australia’s desalination plant at Lonsdale now operates as both engineering achievement and political insurance policy. Built after fierce debate over cost, the facility symbolises how climate adaptation often arrives only after crisis becomes undeniable.

Water experts increasingly warn Adelaide’s future security depends less on average rainfall and more on variability. Longer drought cycles punctuated by intense rainfall events challenge assumptions underpinning reservoir management and agricultural planning.3

Communities beyond metropolitan Adelaide already experience those pressures unevenly. Regional agricultural towns confront declining water reliability while Aboriginal communities continue fighting for stronger recognition of cultural water rights inside Basin governance.

Mental health practitioners across rural South Australia describe growing ecological grief tied to drought, landscape loss and economic uncertainty. Farmers speak less about isolated bad seasons and more about an erosion of confidence that previous climatic patterns will return.

Schools and local councils increasingly incorporate climate preparedness into wellbeing programs because anxiety about future conditions now shapes decisions about work, migration and family planning. The emotional burden is becoming infrastructural.

The coast is moving inward

Along sections of Adelaide’s coastline the argument is no longer whether sea levels will rise but how quickly planning systems acknowledge the consequences. Sand replenishment programs continue around Semaphore and Glenelg while councils debate seawall expansion and long-term retreat scenarios.

Engineers warn much of Adelaide’s coastal infrastructure was designed using historical climate assumptions that underestimate future inundation risk. Roads, stormwater systems and electricity assets across low-lying corridors remain exposed to compounding pressure from sea-level rise and storm surge events.4

Insurance markets are already signalling concern before governments formally redraw risk boundaries. Premium increases in flood and coastal zones increasingly shape household decisions about where families can afford to remain.

The shift carries deeper economic implications because Australian wealth remains heavily concentrated in housing assets. Falling insurability can rapidly become falling property value.

Developers and councils remain caught between economic growth pressures and long-term climate liabilities. New coastal projects still promise jobs and housing supply even as scientific modelling suggests sections of the metropolitan coastline may require expensive protection or eventual retreat.

The political language around adaptation often avoids the phrase managed retreat because it implies surrender. Yet climate planners privately acknowledge some future decisions may involve moving infrastructure and communities rather than endlessly defending them.

Renewable success and household frustration

South Australia built an international reputation as a renewable energy pioneer after rapidly expanding wind and solar generation across the state. Giant batteries and transmission projects transformed the state into a global case study for decarbonisation.

Yet household electricity frustration never disappeared. Many South Australians continue paying high retail prices despite the state’s renewable penetration because wholesale generation costs form only part of final bills.5

Network infrastructure, market concentration and transmission investment continue shaping consumer costs. Energy analysts argue the transition exposed how electricity systems remain political economies rather than purely technological systems.

The state government promotes hydrogen exports and renewable industrial development as engines of future prosperity. Critics question whether projected employment gains and export revenues rely on assumptions about global hydrogen demand that remain uncertain.

Regional communities across the Eyre Peninsula and Mid North increasingly confront another tension inside the renewable transition. Large-scale infrastructure projects can collide with biodiversity protection, agricultural land use and Indigenous heritage concerns.

Mining, energy and property interests continue exerting influence over planning decisions through lobbying and economic leverage. Climate politics rarely divides neatly between environmental protection and economic growth because governments increasingly promise both simultaneously.

Fire landscapes and ecological limits

The Adelaide Hills already carry the memory of catastrophic bushfires stretching across decades. Climate change is expanding fire seasons and drying landscapes previously considered lower risk.

Scientists studying South Australian ecosystems warn some biodiversity losses may become irreversible if warming trends continue. Marine heatwaves inside Gulf St Vincent have already damaged seagrass meadows that support fisheries and coastal ecosystems.9

Conservation strategies designed for relatively stable climatic conditions now face accelerating ecological disruption. Species migration, drought stress and invasive pests increasingly overlap rather than arrive separately.

Indigenous land management practices including cultural burning attract growing attention from fire agencies and ecologists seeking landscape resilience strategies. Yet Aboriginal organisations frequently argue consultation remains inconsistent and underfunded.

Peri-urban development across the Adelaide Hills continues extending housing deeper into bushfire-prone corridors despite repeated warnings from emergency planners. The expansion reflects Australia’s longstanding housing model where lifestyle aspirations often outrun hazard awareness.

Emergency services now prepare for compound disasters involving simultaneous heatwaves, fires and power failures. Those overlapping crises strain communications systems, transport infrastructure and volunteer firefighting capacity.

When adaptation becomes political

Climate scientists increasingly frame adaptation failure as a governance issue rather than purely environmental misfortune. Decisions about zoning, infrastructure and public investment determine which communities absorb escalating risk.

South Australian governments of different political stripes publicly support emissions reduction targets while often moving more cautiously on adaptation planning. Restricting development in high-risk areas remains politically difficult when housing affordability already dominates public debate.

Local councils frequently argue they lack sufficient authority and funding to implement meaningful resilience measures. State governments meanwhile face pressure from developers, agribusiness and industry groups concerned about tighter planning restrictions.

Universities and public agencies also navigate political sensitivities when communicating long-term climate projections. Researchers describe frustration when scientific risk assessments collide with short electoral cycles and economic growth priorities.

The tension appears clearly in discussions around future climate migration. Adelaide could attract Australians leaving hotter or more disaster-prone regions, yet population growth would intensify pressure on housing, water and infrastructure.

For younger South Australians climate change increasingly shapes personal decisions once considered separate from environmental policy. Choices about children, careers and home ownership now intersect with fears about affordability, safety and long-term stability.

The price of delay

Across Adelaide the physical evidence of climate adaptation already exists in fragments. New shade structures rise beside playgrounds while battery projects spread across rural landscapes and desalination infrastructure waits along the coast.

Yet adaptation remains uneven because Australian cities were built around assumptions now breaking apart. Cheap insurance, stable rainfall and predictable summers shaped political expectations that no longer match emerging climate realities.

Scientists warn wet bulb temperature risks could eventually test human survivability thresholds during severe heat events across parts of Australia. Adelaide has not reached those conditions, but emergency planners increasingly model scenarios once considered extreme.10

The deeper question confronting South Australia is whether governments can move faster than the climate itself. Infrastructure decisions made during the next decade may determine which suburbs remain affordable, insurable and habitable by mid-century.

Adaptation also challenges a national identity built around suburban expansion and private ownership. If resilience becomes expensive, the burden will not fall evenly.

The danger for Adelaide is not a single dramatic catastrophe. It is the gradual normalisation of unequal exposure where wealth purchases protection while vulnerability hardens into geography.

Conclusion

Adelaide still presents itself as one of Australia’s more liveable cities, yet climate pressure is steadily reshaping what liveability means. Heatwaves last longer, insurance costs climb faster and infrastructure built for twentieth century weather patterns struggles against twenty-first century extremes.

South Australia also demonstrates that climate adaptation is no longer separate from housing policy, healthcare funding or economic planning. The same forces driving renewable investment and population growth are intensifying pressure on water systems, coastlines and urban inequality.

Political leaders continue framing adaptation as a future management challenge, but many residents already experience it as a present economic reality. Pensioners ration cooling during heatwaves, councils debate retreat from vulnerable coastlines and emergency services prepare for compound disasters once considered improbable.

The state retains advantages including renewable energy capacity, scientific expertise and relatively strong institutional planning. Yet those strengths may matter less if adaptation remains fragmented between agencies, councils and private markets.

Climate change in Adelaide increasingly looks less like an environmental issue than a test of democratic capacity. The question is not whether the city can adapt. It is whether adaptation arrives fairly enough to preserve social cohesion while the climate keeps changing.

References

1. Australian Bureau of Statistics and SA Health heat vulnerability research

2. Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute, Energy Poverty in Australia

3. Murray-Darling Basin Authority climate and water security reports

4. South Australian Coast Protection Board adaptation planning resources

5. Australian Energy Market Commission electricity pricing analysis

6. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change adaptation assessments

7. SA Health Extreme Heat Strategy documents

8. City of Adelaide Urban Forest Strategy

9. CSIRO marine heatwave and seagrass ecosystem research

10. Bureau of Meteorology climate extremes and heatwave projections

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13/05/2026

Australia: The Batteries are Arriving Before the Rules are Ready - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

The grid Australia imagined is arriving faster
than its politics can handle
Key Points
  • IRENA argues firm renewables are now cheaper than new fossil generation in several markets 1
  • The economics depend heavily on falling battery costs and cheap Chinese manufacturing 2
  • Australia’s transmission bottlenecks threaten the pace of renewable expansion 3
  • Grid engineers remain divided over long-duration reliability and Dunkelflaute risks 4
  • AI data centres are reshaping electricity demand and corporate procurement markets 5
  • The transition may replace fossil dependence with mineral and manufacturing dependence 6

A country wired for another century

The transmission towers outside Dubbo cut through paddocks burnt brown by drought. 

Beneath them sit new battery containers, white and anonymous, lined beside solar arrays that stretch towards the horizon. The old coal system still hums in the distance. 

Yet the future already occupies the same landscape.

Australia’s energy transition has become a race between engineering and physics. Coal stations are ageing faster than governments expected. Data centres are multiplying. Electricity demand, flat for years, has started climbing again. 

Into that uncertainty came a new report from the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), claiming that “firm” renewable electricity can now outcompete fossil fuels on cost in many markets. 1

The claim lands at a volatile moment. Households face rising network charges despite periods of collapsing wholesale electricity prices. Renewable projects struggle through community resistance and planning delays. The opposition’s nuclear proposal has reopened arguments many energy economists thought settled years ago.

IRENA’s report introduces a new metric called “firm LCOE”, or firm levelised cost of electricity. The measure attempts to price renewable electricity not merely when the wind blows or the sun shines, but continuously through combinations of solar, wind and batteries. In prime regions, the agency argues, hybrid renewable systems now rival or beat new gas and coal generation on price. 1

Behind the neat graphs sits a more complicated reality. Grid operators do not run power systems on averages. They prepare for terrible days.

The missing hours

Across Europe, energy planners use a German word that now appears regularly in Australian briefings: Dunkelflaute. A dark wind lull. Days when clouds sit over solar farms while wind generation collapses across entire regions.

IRENA acknowledges those events but largely models reliability through statistical resource combinations and battery optimisation rather than extreme multi-week stress scenarios. 4 Critics argue that distinction matters. Short-duration lithium-ion batteries can shift solar output from midday into evening peaks. Seasonal reliability remains another problem entirely.

The economics in the report depend on continued declines in battery costs. Since 2010, battery storage costs have fallen by more than 90%, according to IRENA. 2 The report projects further declines of roughly 30% by 2030. If those curves flatten under mineral shortages, trade wars or higher financing costs, the economics change sharply.

Engineers inside Australia’s electricity market already understand the dilemma. The National Electricity Market stretches more than 5,000 kilometres across fragile transmission corridors. Bushfires, storms and heatwaves increasingly strike simultaneously with demand spikes. During severe summer events, reliability depends not simply on energy availability but on system strength, inertia and rapid frequency control.

Coal turbines once provided those services automatically through heavy spinning machinery. Inverter-based renewables can replicate some functions through software and synthetic inertia. Yet even optimistic planners rarely argue the transition is complete.

Gas remains embedded in many transition models as insurance against prolonged reliability gaps. That includes scenarios inside the Australian Energy Market Operator’s Integrated System Plan. 3

The Chinese cost floor

The report repeatedly identifies China as defining the global “cost floor” for firm renewables. 6 That phrase carries geopolitical weight.

Cheap Chinese manufacturing helped collapse global solar and battery prices over the past decade. Australian households benefited directly. So did developers building giant renewable zones across Queensland, Victoria, and New South Wales.

Yet the same concentration worries strategic analysts. Australia spent decades warning about dependence on Middle Eastern oil while building an energy transition reliant on Chinese solar modules, battery cells and mineral processing.

Trade tensions already complicate the picture. The United States and Europe are expanding tariffs and industrial subsidies to rebuild domestic manufacturing. If protectionism deepens, renewable costs may rise rather than continue their downward trajectory.

The transition also shifts extraction pressures rather than eliminating them. Lithium mines in Western Australia, nickel processing in Indonesia and cobalt extraction in the Democratic Republic of Congo now sit at the centre of global energy security calculations. The clean-energy economy still depends on industrial supply chains, shipping routes and geopolitical leverage.

IRENA frames renewables partly as an energy independence project. The argument contains truth. Wind and sunlight cannot be embargoed. Battery supply chains can.

The Australian bottleneck

In the Riverina, farmers opposing new transmission corridors have become unlikely protagonists in the national energy debate. The towers crossing their properties are not abstract climate policy. They are steel structures cutting through grazing land.

Australia’s renewable expansion increasingly collides with the slower realities of transmission construction. Renewable Energy Zones remain delayed by planning disputes, labour shortages and rising construction costs. Some solar farms now sit constrained because the grid cannot absorb their output.

IRENA’s cost comparisons focus largely on generation and storage economics rather than the full cost of system-wide integration. 1 Critics argue that omission matters. Building a renewable-heavy grid requires thousands of kilometres of transmission, synchronous condensers, backup reserves and complex digital control systems.

The result creates a political paradox. Wholesale prices can fall during periods of abundant renewable generation while household bills continue rising because network costs expand simultaneously.

Western Australia exposes another challenge. Unlike the eastern states, the South West Interconnected System remains relatively isolated. Interconnection cannot smooth variability across multiple regions as easily as in Europe. Reliability therefore depends more heavily on local storage and backup generation.

Australia’s geography still provides advantages. Strong solar resources, high wind quality and vast land areas make hybrid renewable systems unusually competitive. IRENA identifies Australia as approaching fossil-fuel parity for firm renewables, particularly in strong wind corridors. 1

The question is no longer whether renewables dominate new generation investment. They already do. The harder question concerns the speed at which storage, transmission and industrial electrification can scale together.

References

1. IRENA, 24/7 renewables: The economics of firm solar and wind

2. IRENA press release on firm renewable costs

3. Australian Energy Market Operator, Integrated System Plan

4. IRENA full report PDF

5. IRENA on AI and data-centre demand

6. Reuters reporting on the IRENA findings

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12/05/2026

Melbourne’s Liveability Bargain is Breaking Under Climate Pressure - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Extreme heat is reshaping how Melbourne survives
Key Points
  • Melbourne’s outer suburbs face the harshest heat exposure because of sparse tree canopy and poor housing quality 1
  • Climate risk is colliding with mortgage stress and insurance inflation across growth corridors 2
  • Hospitals transport systems and energy infrastructure remain vulnerable during compound disasters 3
  • Floodplain development continues despite increasingly severe climate projections 4
  • Climate anxiety and smoke exposure are worsening mental and respiratory health outcomes 5
  • Experts warn Melbourne may require deeper adaptation and managed retreat within decades 6

Heat divides the city

By late afternoon in Melbourne’s west the asphalt around Tarneit and Melton can radiate temperatures above 50C. 

Children wait beside exposed roads for delayed buses while air conditioners strain against dry northerly winds. 

The city’s wealthier inner suburbs sit several degrees cooler beneath mature trees and older parks.

Researchers have tracked the pattern for years. Suburbs with low tree canopy and rapid housing growth experience significantly higher urban heat exposure during extreme events. Many households also occupy poorly insulated homes built before stronger efficiency standards arrived 1.

Heat kills more Australians than floods bushfires or cyclones. Victoria’s Department of Health has repeatedly linked spikes in ambulance callouts and excess mortality to prolonged heatwaves. Elderly residents renters and people with chronic illness remain the most exposed 7.

Public housing towers across Melbourne reveal another fault line. Residents in ageing estates often rely on portable fans because retrofits remain incomplete or unfunded. Announced resilience programs have frequently moved slower than the climate itself.

Inner Melbourne retains advantages built decades earlier. Dense tram access libraries shaded parks and community facilities provide informal cooling networks. Outer growth corridors continue expanding faster than infrastructure delivery.

Urban planners defend expansion by pointing to population growth and housing shortages. Critics argue governments continue approving estates in heat vulnerable corridors because land remains politically and commercially attractive. The result is a city reproducing climate risk through planning policy.

Smoke anxiety and the new public health burden

The Black Summer bushfires altered Melbourne’s relationship with air. Smoke drifted across the city for weeks in early 2020 and schools closed outdoor activities as particulate pollution climbed to hazardous levels. Children in the north and east experienced repeated exposure during critical developmental years.

Respiratory specialists now warn that recurring smoke seasons could create cumulative health impacts resembling chronic urban pollution. Fine particulate matter aggravates asthma cardiovascular disease and long term lung damage. Researchers continue studying how repeated smoke exposure affects children over decades 8.

Mental health pressures are proving harder to quantify yet impossible to ignore. Young Australians increasingly describe climate anxiety as a defining emotional condition. Emergency responders and farming families displaced toward Melbourne report exhaustion grief and chronic uncertainty after repeated disasters 5.

Health systems remain unevenly prepared for prolonged heat emergencies. Hospitals can surge during short events yet sustained heatwaves create staffing pressure energy demand and rising admissions simultaneously. A widespread blackout during extreme heat would expose vulnerabilities governments rarely discuss publicly.

Cooling centres exist across many councils but access remains inconsistent. Limited public transport disability barriers and restricted operating hours reduce their usefulness for vulnerable residents. Migrant communities also report difficulty accessing climate health information in culturally appropriate formats.

The cost of living crisis now carries a climate surcharge

Climate pressure increasingly arrives through household bills rather than dramatic disasters alone. Insurance premiums have surged across parts of Victoria exposed to flood bushfire and storm risk. Financial analysts warn some suburbs could become effectively uninsurable within decades 2.

Banks and superannuation funds face growing exposure to declining property values in climate vulnerable regions. The Reserve Bank and financial regulators have repeatedly warned that climate risk could destabilise mortgage markets if insurers withdraw or repeated disasters erode confidence 9.

Outer suburban families carry particular vulnerability because mortgages transport costs and energy bills already consume large shares of household income. Heatwaves intensify electricity demand while unreliable public transport forces dependence on private vehicles. Climate change amplifies existing inequality rather than creating entirely new forms of hardship.

Meanwhile governments continue approving housing in floodplains and peri urban fire corridors. Developers argue Melbourne requires rapid supply to absorb population growth. Councils and environmental groups counter that short term housing targets are overriding long term resilience.

The Maribyrnong floods in 2022 exposed the consequences. Residents returned to homes rebuilt beside waterways long identified as vulnerable. Public reconstruction funds flowed again into areas expected to face repeated flooding under stronger rainfall extremes 4.

Infrastructure built for another climate

Melbourne’s infrastructure was largely designed for twentieth century weather patterns. Rail lines buckle during severe heat and signalling systems fail under electrical stress. Heavy rainfall increasingly overwhelms drainage networks in municipalities shaped by decades of underinvestment.

Engineers warn compound disasters present the greatest danger. A major heatwave combined with bushfire smoke and power failure could disrupt hospitals telecommunications and transport simultaneously. Such scenarios once appeared theoretical. Climate modelling now treats them as plausible 3.

Victoria’s energy transition adds another layer of pressure. Electrification promises lower emissions but also increases dependence on a resilient grid during extreme weather. Population growth and rising cooling demand are arriving faster than many transmission upgrades.

The state’s desalination plant remains a symbol of both adaptation and political conflict. Built after the Millennium Drought the project was condemned as excessive when rains returned. Today declining catchment rainfall has revived concerns about long term water security 10.

Transport networks around Port Phillip Bay face separate risks from sea level rise and storm surge. Low lying infrastructure around bayside suburbs may become increasingly expensive to defend. Few politicians openly discuss managed retreat because of fears surrounding property markets and electoral backlash.

Nature retreating at the city’s edge

Melbourne’s growth corridors are also ecological frontiers. Native grasslands wetlands and habitat corridors continue shrinking beneath roads warehouses and housing estates. Scientists warn some Victorian ecosystems sit dangerously close to irreversible decline 11.

Urban greening programs have expanded tree planting across parts of Melbourne yet many experts argue targets remain too modest for projected warming. Young saplings struggle through hotter summers while established canopy disappears faster than replacement programs mature.

Environmental groups increasingly criticise biodiversity offset schemes which allow habitat destruction in exchange for protection elsewhere. Developers describe offsets as pragmatic planning tools. Ecologists argue they often legitimise irreversible loss.

Traditional Owners continue pushing for stronger incorporation of Indigenous land management practices. Cultural burning programs have expanded in regional Victoria yet remain limited beside the scale of fire risk across peri urban landscapes. Indigenous leaders frequently describe consultation processes as symbolic rather than transformative.

Wildlife loss rarely commands sustained political attention because extinction unfolds gradually. Yet scientists warn species already stressed by fragmentation face mounting pressure from heat drought and invasive species. The disappearance may occur quietly long before policy catches up.

The politics of adaptation

Victoria presents itself as a national climate leader through emissions targets renewable investment and electrification programs. Adaptation receives far less attention despite escalating disaster costs. Governments still prefer discussing future technological solutions over politically difficult questions about retreat resilience and infrastructure limits.

Lobbying relationships further complicate decision making. Property developers energy companies and infrastructure firms exert substantial influence over planning outcomes behind closed doors. Councils often inherit climate responsibilities without equivalent funding or authority.

Public communication around climate risk remains cautious. Authorities fear blunt warnings about flood or heat exposure could destabilise property values and provoke backlash. Critics argue that withholding risk information leaves communities less prepared for inevitable disruption.

The media landscape has also shaped public understanding unevenly. Climate misinformation surrounding electrification urban density and renewable energy continues circulating online. Complex adaptation debates are frequently reduced to culture war talking points.

At the same time climate impacts are reshaping Melbourne’s identity itself. Outdoor festivals sporting events and café culture increasingly depend on smoke free summers and manageable temperatures. The idea of Melbourne as one of the world’s most liveable cities now carries an asterisk.

A future measured in degrees

Climate models describe profoundly different Melbournes under 2C 3C and 4C warming pathways. Under lower warming scenarios parts of the city may remain broadly manageable through extensive adaptation. Higher scenarios bring more dangerous heat prolonged drought and escalating infrastructure strain 6.

Some suburbs will likely remain more resilient because of geography wealth and established infrastructure. Others may become increasingly difficult to insure cool or defend. The dividing line may follow income as much as climate itself.

Researchers already expect climate migration to reshape Australian cities. Melbourne could receive internal migrants escaping worsening conditions elsewhere while also confronting displacement within Victoria. Housing health and transport systems already struggle under current demand.

The central question is no longer whether Melbourne will change. The argument now concerns speed fairness and political honesty. Decisions made this decade about housing energy transport and urban design will shape whether the city adapts unevenly or coherently.

Climate adaptation ultimately forces moral choices alongside engineering ones. Governments must decide which communities receive protection first and which risks become acceptable. Wealthier areas usually secure faster responses because they possess stronger political influence and economic leverage.

Melbourne still possesses advantages many global cities envy. It retains institutional capacity scientific expertise and substantial wealth. Yet adaptation windows narrow quickly when planning systems continue reproducing exposure faster than infrastructure can reduce it.

The city’s future may depend less on technological optimism than political willingness to confront uncomfortable realities directly. Heat does not negotiate with election cycles. Water does not recognise planning boundaries.

For decades Melbourne marketed itself through stability and liveability. Climate change is testing whether those promises can survive a harsher century. The answer will emerge suburb by suburb and summer by summer.

References

  1. Climate Council, Climate Risk Map Australia
  2. Actuaries Institute, Home Insurance Affordability Update
  3. Australian Climate Service, National Climate Risk and Infrastructure Assessments
  4. IBAC Victoria, Managing Flood Risks in Victoria
  5. Beyond Blue, Climate Change and Mental Health
  6. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, AR6 Synthesis Report
  7. Victorian Department of Health, Extreme Heat and Health
  8. Medical Journal of Australia, Health Impacts of Bushfire Smoke Exposure
  9. Reserve Bank of Australia, Climate Change Risks to Australian Banks
  10. Melbourne Water, Water Supply and Catchment Management
  11. Victoria State of the Environment Report, Biodiversity and Habitat Loss

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11/05/2026

Australia: When Heat Becomes Policy Failure - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Australia is entering a decade its hospitals
were never designed to survive
Key Points
  • Heat-related illness is rising faster than Australian health systems can adapt 1
  • Climate-health models rely on assumptions that become unstable under extreme warming 2
  • Regional and Indigenous communities remain dangerously underrepresented in climate-health datasets 3
  • Insurance retreat and infrastructure strain are already reshaping Australian towns 4
  • Governments continue approving fossil fuel expansion despite escalating public health risks 5
  • Black Summer exposed systemic failures that remain largely unresolved 6

The wards fill before the sirens start

Western Sydney hospital staff now prepare for heatwaves the way emergency crews once prepared for cyclones. 

Ambulances arrive carrying elderly patients with kidney stress, dehydration, respiratory collapse, and cardiac complications long before temperatures officially peak. Heatstroke rarely arrives alone.

The latest paper published in The Lancet Planetary Health argues climate change has moved beyond an environmental problem into a compounding public health crisis. 

The study sits within a growing body of Lancet Countdown research linking rising temperatures to mortality, labour losses, mental health deterioration, infectious disease spread, and collapsing resilience across health systems. 1

Its central finding is blunt. Australia faces escalating heat exposure that will increasingly intersect with ageing populations, fragile infrastructure, housing inequality, and overstretched hospitals. The danger does not emerge from one catastrophe. It accumulates through repeated stress.

Researchers relied on global climate models used widely across the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Those models combine historical mortality data, emissions pathways, demographic projections, and temperature simulations to estimate future health burdens. Most scenarios assume continued warming between 1.8C and 3C this century unless emissions fall rapidly. 2

Yet modelling climate-health impacts remains contested terrain. Critics argue mortality attribution can exaggerate direct climate effects because socioeconomic factors, ageing demographics, urban density, and healthcare access also shape outcomes. Some researchers question whether global datasets adequately capture local adaptation or declining cold-related mortality.

Even the paper’s authors acknowledge uncertainty around behavioural adaptation, migration, air-conditioning uptake, and future policy intervention. But uncertainty cuts both ways. Extreme weather events often exceed historical assumptions embedded inside older climate-health models.

Australia has already watched supposedly exceptional events become seasonal realities.

The science is robust but uneven

Climate-health modelling depends heavily on exposure-response relationships. Researchers examine how mortality changes across temperature ranges, then project future outcomes under warming scenarios. Most studies draw on internationally standardised datasets because local Australian data remain fragmented, inconsistent, or incomplete. 3

That creates blind spots. Remote Indigenous communities experience vastly different housing quality, healthcare access, occupational exposure, and infrastructure vulnerability compared with metropolitan populations. Yet many national datasets flatten those differences into broad regional averages.

The paper acknowledges sparse data from remote Australia and limited longitudinal evidence around mental health impacts. Researchers also concede uncertainty around compounding events such as simultaneous heatwaves, smoke exposure, flooding, and infectious disease outbreaks.

Black Summer exposed those interactions in brutal detail. Bushfire smoke drifted across Canberra, Sydney, and regional New South Wales for weeks, triggering respiratory illness and psychological distress while hospitals struggled through concurrent emergency pressures. 6

Scientists broadly agree rising temperatures intensify heat mortality risks. Debate centres on magnitude, pace, and adaptation capacity. Bjørn Lomborg and other sceptical commentators argue some Lancet analyses understate declining cold deaths or overstate direct causality. Supporters counter that net mortality risks still increase sharply under severe warming because heat extremes rise nonlinearly.

Most climate-health researchers agree on one point. Australia lacks sufficient localised health surveillance to fully measure emerging risks across low-income suburbs, mining regions, agricultural communities, and remote settlements.

Australia’s geography is becoming a liability

The paper’s implications for Australia are severe because the continent already sits close to physiological heat limits across large regions. Climate models consistently identify inland New South Wales, western Sydney, northern Queensland, and parts of Western Australia as high-risk heat corridors over the next decade.

Western Sydney has become a case study in urban climate inequality. Wealthier coastal suburbs benefit from sea breezes, tree canopy, and better-insulated housing. Inland suburbs often absorb temperatures exceeding coastal areas by 10 degrees during major heat events.

The health consequences follow postcode lines. Lower-income households are less likely to afford efficient cooling, home insulation, or private healthcare access during prolonged heatwaves.

Regional Australia faces sharper exposure still. Rural hospitals already struggle with workforce shortages, ambulance delays, and limited surge capacity. Heatwaves increase renal illness, cardiovascular strain, agricultural injuries, and mental health crises simultaneously. 7

The study also intersects with worsening flood and bushfire risks. Australia’s climate hazards no longer arrive sequentially. Communities now move from drought to flood to smoke events within a few years, exhausting insurance systems and psychological resilience.

Insurers have already begun retreating from high-risk areas across northern Australia and flood-prone regions of Queensland and New South Wales. Premiums have surged, while some households effectively lose access to affordable coverage altogether. 4

The economic implications stretch far beyond hospitals. Extreme heat reduces labour productivity across agriculture, mining, logistics, and construction. Outdoor work becomes physiologically dangerous for longer periods each year.

Governments speak adaptation while approving expansion

Australia’s federal and state governments increasingly describe climate change as a national security and resilience challenge. Yet fossil fuel expansion continues across gas basins, coal export infrastructure, and major mining projects.

That contradiction sits at the centre of the Lancet paper’s political implications. The research strengthens arguments that climate policy delay creates measurable health costs, not abstract environmental losses decades away.

Australia’s current emissions targets remain inconsistent with pathways limiting warming near 1.5C. Climate-health researchers argue every fraction of warming avoided reduces mortality exposure, healthcare strain, and economic disruption. 5

Previous warnings were often sidelined. The Medical Journal of Australia-Lancet Countdown repeatedly documented escalating climate-health risks before Black Summer and the catastrophic 2022 floods. Many recommendations around preparedness, smoke response, urban cooling, and hospital resilience remain partially implemented. 8

Industry lobbying continues shaping the national response. Fossil fuel companies argue gas expansion supports energy reliability and export revenue during the transition. Public health experts increasingly frame that argument as incompatible with long-term health protection.

Legal implications are also evolving. Climate litigation against governments and corporations increasingly references foreseeable harm, public health risks, and failures of duty of care. The stronger the scientific attribution becomes, the harder political leaders may find it to argue ignorance.

Yet Australian politics still treats climate change primarily as an emissions debate. The paper suggests the deeper issue is health system survivability.

Hospitals were built for another climate

Australian healthcare infrastructure evolved around historical weather patterns. Many hospitals, aged-care facilities, schools, and prisons were never designed for repeated extreme heat exposure.

Emergency departments now experience surges during major heatwaves comparable to infectious disease outbreaks. Ambulance ramping worsens as staff themselves face exhaustion and dehydration. Frontline healthcare workers increasingly operate inside the same climate hazards affecting patients.

Mental health services face another growing burden. Researchers link climate disasters with rising anxiety, depression, trauma, and post-traumatic stress disorder, particularly among children and disaster-exposed communities. 9

The paper also highlights unequal vulnerability. Elderly Australians, migrant workers, outdoor labourers, Indigenous communities, and low-income households face disproportionate exposure because adaptation requires money, mobility, stable housing, and healthcare access.

Black Summer offered a warning. Smoke inhalation affected millions across eastern Australia, yet public messaging often remained inconsistent and reactive. Many aged-care facilities lacked effective air filtration systems years after the crisis.

Researchers examining health system preparedness found surprisingly little implementation science guiding climate adaptation across healthcare systems. 10

That distinction matters. Emergency systems can absorb short shocks. They fail under chronic escalation.

The economic map is quietly changing

The paper’s projections reach deep into Australia’s economic structure. Mining, agriculture, insurance, tourism, and energy all depend on climatic stability that no longer exists.

Agriculture already faces heat stress, water insecurity, crop volatility, and labour disruption. Extreme temperatures reduce livestock productivity while increasing irrigation demand across regions facing declining rainfall reliability.

Property markets may become the next pressure point. Homes in flood-prone or fire-exposed regions risk declining valuations as insurers retreat and banks reassess long-term exposure.

Corporate Australia increasingly acknowledges climate risk in investor disclosures, but climate-health impacts remain less visible than infrastructure or emissions liabilities. Researchers argue the hidden costs include lost labour hours, healthcare spending, mental health burdens, and declining productivity. 11

Adaptation itself may deepen inequality. Wealthier households can relocate, retrofit homes, or purchase private resilience through insurance and healthcare access. Poorer communities absorb greater physical exposure while carrying fewer financial buffers.

Some sectors will profit from adaptation spending. Renewable energy, cooling infrastructure, medical technology, engineering firms, and disaster resilience industries already position themselves for expansion.

But adaptation economies also create moral questions. Who pays when entire communities become too expensive to defend?

The burden falls unevenly

The paper repeatedly returns to unequal exposure. Climate change does not distribute risk evenly across Australia.

First Nations communities often face the harshest intersection of climate exposure, housing vulnerability, healthcare shortages, and infrastructure neglect. Remote settlements may experience dangerous heat conditions while lacking reliable cooling, transport access, or emergency medical services.

Researchers increasingly criticise climate-health literature for insufficient Indigenous participation and weak integration of Indigenous knowledge systems. Data gaps remain profound across remote Australia. 3

Climate adaptation can also reinforce existing inequality. Urban greening projects, resilient housing upgrades, and flood protections often arrive first in wealthier suburbs with stronger political influence.

Regional Australia risks further marginalisation as climate pressures intensify. Young workers may leave vulnerable towns as insurance costs rise and industries contract. Health services then weaken further as populations decline.

The paper stops short of forecasting large-scale internal climate migration. Yet many researchers increasingly believe Australia will experience gradual population shifts away from highly exposed regions over coming decades.

That process may already have begun.

Australians are hearing the warnings differently now

Climate-health research once struggled for political traction because climate change remained framed as an environmental or economic debate. Extreme heat altered that framing.

Heatwaves kill quietly. They rarely produce dramatic television images comparable to bushfires or floods. Yet heat remains Australia’s deadliest natural hazard.

Media coverage has also evolved. During Black Summer, smoke-filled skylines transformed abstract climate projections into lived urban experience. Public concern increased sharply, though fatigue followed quickly.

Researchers now navigate a difficult balance between urgency and accusations of activism. Climate-health scientists increasingly present evidence in explicitly public health language because mortality, hospitalisation, and system strain communicate risk more concretely than emissions graphs.

Disinformation campaigns still shape public understanding. Fossil fuel interests and sceptical commentators frequently challenge attribution science, modelling assumptions, or economic forecasts. Some criticism reflects legitimate methodological debate. Some seeks to delay policy response.

The Lancet paper ultimately argues the greater danger lies not in overreaction but normalisation. Australians are adjusting psychologically to conditions once considered extraordinary.

A future already visible

The future described in the paper does not begin in 2050. It already exists in fragments across western Sydney emergency wards, flooded northern rivers towns, smoke-damaged communities, and heat-strained regional hospitals.

Australia still possesses enormous adaptive capacity. It remains wealthy, technologically advanced, and institutionally stable compared with many nations facing harsher climate exposure. Yet adaptation windows narrow when governments continue expanding industries driving the same risks health systems prepare to absorb.

The deeper warning inside the Lancet research is institutional. Hospitals, insurance markets, emergency services, infrastructure systems, and democratic politics evolved around climatic assumptions that no longer hold.

Future accountability may not centre on whether leaders understood the risks. The evidence already exists. The harder question will concern why governments continued treating climate change as tomorrow’s environmental debate while emergency departments quietly became the front line.

References

1. The Lancet Planetary Health. Climate and health research collection.

2. IPCC Sixth Assessment Report. Climate Change 2023 Synthesis Report.

3. Medical Journal of Australia-Lancet Countdown. Australia and climate health reports.

4. Climate Council. Uninsurable Nation report.

5. Climate Change Authority. Australia emissions targets review.

6. Yu P et al. “Bushfires in Australia: a serious health emergency under climate change.” The Lancet Planetary Health.

7. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Rural and remote health.

8. MJA-Lancet Countdown 2022 report.

9. Duggan J et al. “Climate emotions: it is ok to feel the way you do.” The Lancet Planetary Health.

10. Fisher G et al. “Health system preparations for pandemics and climate change.” The Lancet Planetary Health.

11. Longden T et al. “Considering health damages and co-benefits in climate change policy assessment.”

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