Author
Peter Walton
is the CEO of Care Australia. |
But these words weren’t written about COVID-19. This was how Fiji Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama described the Category 5 cyclone that tore across the island nation earlier this month.
The full extent of Cyclone Yasa’s carnage is still being assessed, but thousands are reported to have lost their homes.
Tropical cyclone Yasa tore through Fiji on December 17.
Credit: KKU The Fijian Artist/Twitter |
Meanwhile, hurricanes in the Caribbean have been so common this year that the World Meteorological Organisation exhausted its list of names and resorted to using the Greek alphabet for only the second time.
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In other words, climate-related disasters are increasingly breaking their own records, which is why — five years on from the Paris Agreement — it is heartening to see so many countries doubling down on their emissions reduction commitments.
Australia's major trading partners Japan and South Korea have committed to net-zero emissions by 2050, as has China by 2060. The UK, EU and New Zealand have also committed to the 2050 target, as has US president-elect Joe Biden.
The ferocity of last summer's bushfires shocked Australians. |
Australia, however, is sticking with the unambitious goal of a 26 per cent-28 per cent reduction on 2005 levels by 2030. This is nowhere near enough.
Bushfires
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Australia's image takes hit after bushfires over lack of climate
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Climate change is already affecting us all, but the stakes are particularly high — existentially high — for Pacific Islands nations.
As Anote Tong, former president of the low-lying island nation of Kiribati, recently wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald, the current trajectory would lead to flooding so intense as to render his homeland uninhabitable.
Despite pressure from major trading parties and the community,
Australia's federal government has defended its conservative
emissions targets. Credit: James Brickwood |
Climate change is making super-storms terrifyingly frequent. Cyclone Yasa was the 16th Category 5 cyclone in the South Pacific since 2000 — a fourfold increase on the 20 years before, when there were only four such cyclones.
Forced into a perpetual state of picking up the pieces from one disaster after another, island nations’ resources are drained away from important tasks such as reducing poverty. As we’ve seen during the pandemic, it’s the most marginalised people hit hardest during a crisis, such as women and those on low incomes.
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This is not to say climate challenges are being taken lying down. Forced to innovate out of sheer necessity, people living on the frontlines of climate change can teach the world plenty.
But adapting to live with a problem is no substitution for stopping the problem at its source before it’s too late — which is where emissions reduction comes in.
For countries that have contributed so minimally to the problem, Pacific Island nations’ are doing more than their fair share of heavy lifting.
Yet Fiji was the first country to ratify the Paris Agreement, and the Marshall Islands was the first to adopt a net-zero-by-2050 target back in 2018, with the country’s then-president telling fellow leaders “if we can do it, so can you”.
Australia must help Pacific neighbours prepare for a world in which super-storms, floods, drought and other climate-related disasters become even more frequent and severe. Every dollar we spend on preparation will save lives and money over and over again into the future.
Importantly, a good neighbour recognises when they have been — and continue to be — complicit in the problem. Pacific nations have led the way on committing to net zero by 2050, and the world is following suit. It’s time we did too.
Links
- (AU) 'Sacrificial Canary': Fiji Warns Australia Not To Let Pacific Sink
- (AU) Pacific Leaders Condemn Australia's Climate Target As 'One Of The Weakest' In Open Letter
- (AU) Australia Asks UN To Dismiss Torres Strait Islanders' Claim Climate Change Affects Their Human Rights
- 'Happy To Pay Lip Service': Fiji PM Calls Out Australia At UN Conference
- Scott Morrison's Climate Pact With The Pacific 'Family' Exposes The Hollowness Of His Words
- Pacific Leaders Urge The World Not To Accept The 'Living Nightmare' Of Climate Change
- ‘Our People Are Dying’: Australia’s Climate Confrontation In The Pacific
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