26/06/2026

Ten Australians Challenge Australia's Fossil Fuel Exports at the United Nations - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Key Points
  • Australia's coal and gas exports account for approximately 3.5% of global CO2 emissions annually, placing it among the world's largest fossil fuel polluters by export volume.[3]
  • Ten Australians filed the Hard Truths complaint with the UN Human Rights Committee on 22-23 June 2026, seeking a declaration that continued fossil fuel export approvals are unlawful.[4]
  • The International Court of Justice ruled on 23 July 2025 that all States bear a binding legal obligation to prevent significant harm to the climate system.[8]
  • The International Court of Justice ruled on 23 July 2025 that all States bear a binding legal obligation to prevent significant harm to the climate system.[8]
  • Legally blind Brisbane resident Brendon Donohue was trapped in his apartment for 10 days during the 2022 floods after building power, lifts, and communications failed simultaneously.[11]
  • A marine heatwave approximately 2.5 degrees Celsius above average triggered a toxic algal bloom covering 4,500 square kilometres of South Australian coastline from early 2025.[10]
  • The Federal Court ruled in July 2025 that Australia's greenhouse gas reduction targets constitute core government policy, placing them beyond the scope of common law review.[6]

Ten Australians have filed a landmark UN climate complaint targeting Australia's fossil fuel export approvals.

The complaint was filed on 22-23 June 2026 by Traditional Owners, firefighters, teachers, students, and disability advocates. 

Each claimant has experienced serious harm from bushfires, heatwaves, floods, sea level rise, or algal blooms.[1]

Australia is among the world's largest fossil fuel exporters by greenhouse gas emissions. 

Around 80% of its coal and gas production is shipped overseas to be burned. 

The resulting emissions, excluded from national climate accounting, fuel the extreme events now harming the claimants.[2]

The case asks the committee to declare that continued fossil fuel export approvals violate international human rights law. Claimants seek a credible federal plan to phase out coal and gas exports. 

The case marks a new front in Australian climate litigation following domestic court setbacks.[3]

Legal Precedent and International Law Intersections

The Hard Truths complaint draws directly on the ICJ advisory opinion of July 2025. Australia joined 140 nations in passing a UN resolution supporting that ruling in May 2026.[4]

The ICJ ruled on 23 July 2025 that States have binding obligations to prevent significant harm to the climate system. It established a stringent due diligence standard requiring precautionary, science-based action from all governments. Both State actions and omissions that contribute to greenhouse gas emissions can trigger legal responsibility.

The Hard Truths case is the first UN body challenge filed since that ICJ ruling was delivered.[5]

The UN Human Rights Committee adjudicates complaints under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Australia ratified the Covenant in 1972, binding itself to its enumerated human rights protections.[3]

The committee's 18 independent experts assess whether signatory States have breached treaty obligations. Unlike Federal Court proceedings, the process examines international human rights law rather than domestic negligence principles. Committee recommendations carry significant diplomatic and legal weight, even without direct enforcement mechanisms.

The failed Pabai Federal Court case illustrates why claimants turned to the international process. Justice Wigney ruled on 15 July 2025 that Australia's emissions targets constitute core government policy.[6]

That ruling held that core policy decisions fall outside the scope of common law negligence duties. The Pabai decision also declined to recognise cultural loss as a compensable category of harm. The Hard Truths complaint avoids these limitations by grounding its claims in the ICCPR.

Fossil Fuel Export Liability and Scope 3 Emissions

Australia's coal and gas exports generated approximately 1.15 billion tonnes of CO2 in 2023.[2]

An additional 46 million tonnes arose from domestic extraction and processing of fuels destined for export. Australia's total fossil fuel carbon footprint accounts for approximately 4.5% of global fossil CO2 emissions. Around 80% of all coal and gas produced in Australia is shipped overseas for combustion.

Scope 3 emissions are those produced when exported fuels are burned abroad by importing countries. Australia's national climate targets exclude these export-derived emissions from domestic accounting entirely.[7]

Exported emissions are approximately three times larger than Australia's domestic territorial greenhouse gas output. Australia's total export-inclusive carbon footprint would consume around 9% of the remaining 1.5-degree global carbon budget.[2]

Fossil fuel export subsidies increased by approximately 30% between the 2022-23 and 2023-24 financial years. Total subsidies reached approximately AUD 14.5 billion annually, according to the Australia Institute.[7]

Budget estimates indicate further subsidy increases in subsequent financial years. The complaint identifies continued government subsidies as active facilitation of foreseeable climate harm. Claimants argue the ICJ's due diligence standard extends to regulatory and financial support for fossil fuel extraction.

The government's 2050 net-zero target covers only domestic territorial emissions. It sets no cap or phase-down timeline for the vastly larger category of exported emissions. Claimants argue this creates a structural gap between stated climate commitments and Australia's actual global impact.

Climate Attribution Science and Evidentiary Standards

Climate attribution science quantifies how much climate change altered the probability of a specific extreme weather event. Peer-reviewed attribution methods now form the evidentiary backbone of international climate human rights litigation.[8]

The 2022 Brisbane floods caused unprecedented inundation across South East Queensland. Climate science links the intensity of such events to rising ocean surface temperatures driven by greenhouse warming. Warming oceans increase atmospheric moisture, making extreme rainfall events more severe and more frequent.

South Australia's 2025 toxic algal bloom was driven by a climate-fuelled marine heatwave. Ocean temperatures rose approximately 2.5 degrees Celsius above the long-term average from September 2024 onwards.[9]

That thermal anomaly triggered a bloom of the dinoflagellate Karenia mikimotoi across approximately 4,500 square kilometres of coastline. Nothing could be done to dilute or dissipate the bloom once it had established. The marine heatwave was attributable to the cumulative warming effect of global greenhouse gas emissions.

Citizen science records documented more than 40,000 dead sea creatures across approximately 450 species by late 2025.[10]

Attribution science isolates the contribution of specific emission sources using probabilistic modelling frameworks. Scientists calculate what fraction of observed warming results from an identifiable quantity of emissions. The ICJ acknowledged that causation pathways are now sufficiently established for State legal responsibility claims.

The Hard Truths complaint uses attribution evidence to demonstrate that harm to claimants was foreseeable. Continued export approvals by the federal government, the complaint argues, deepen individual exposure to climate extreme events. Attribution evidence enables a direct evidentiary link between policy decisions and lived climate harm.

Vulnerable Populations, Disability, and Emergency Infrastructure

Brendon Donohue is a disability and climate advocate from Brisbane. He lives with blindness, glaucoma, and Peters Plus syndrome, a rare genetic condition affecting vision and organ development.[11]

During the February 2022 Brisbane floods, floodwaters reached his community housing building's basement. The power supply, lifts, intercom, and front entrance all failed simultaneously. Donohue remained trapped in his apartment for 10 days, unable to read emergency exit signage due to his blindness.

Brisbane City Council issued a midnight evacuation alert, but Donohue had no safe means of egress. Roads were flooded and support workers could no longer reach the building. His experience exposed systemic failures in disability-inclusive emergency planning for high-density urban buildings.[11]

Australia has no binding federal guidelines for disability-accessible evacuation from multi-storey residential buildings. Building codes have been updated since 2022 but contain no mandatory backup communications or power requirements. People with vision impairment face particular danger when emergency signage becomes the sole guide to egress.

The National Disability Insurance Scheme funds daily living supports but includes no climate disaster provisions. Individual support plans address routine needs rather than emergency infrastructure or evacuation protocols.[3]

People with power-dependent mobility aids face acute risk when building systems fail during extreme events. Extreme heat presents a compounding danger for those with conditions exacerbated by temperature extremes. Donohue described how heat and glare together make independent outdoor navigation difficult and unsafe.

The Hard Truths complaint identifies disability and chronic illness as aggravating factors in climate harm. It argues the government's failure to plan for these vulnerabilities constitutes a breach of the right to life.[4]

Public Housing Infrastructure and Climate Adaptation Failure

Melissa Fisher is a disability and anti-poverty advocate living in public housing in Adelaide. She experiences chronic auto-inflammatory conditions that are significantly worsened by extreme heat.[5]

During Adelaide heatwaves, even the tap water in Fisher's poorly insulated unit runs warm. Her property features concrete walls and a metal roof, materials that absorb and retain heat. It was built without climate adaptation standards and lacks modern split-system cooling.

South Australia's public housing stock includes a significant proportion of older properties with inadequate thermal performance. Retrofit programmes exist but face chronic underfunding relative to the scale of the deficiency.[7]

Federal housing grants have prioritised new supply over climate resilience upgrades to existing social housing. Heat burden falls disproportionately on public housing residents, who lack the resources to relocate or supplement cooling. People with chronic illness face heightened hospitalisation risk during sustained extreme heat events.

The federal Safeguard Mechanism addresses industrial emissions from large facilities. Neither the Safeguard Mechanism nor domestic housing policy addresses the adaptation gap in social housing infrastructure.[7]

Climate policy and housing policy continue to operate in separate administrative silos at the federal level. The Hard Truths complaint frames Fisher's situation as a violation of ICCPR rights to privacy and home. Article 17 of the Covenant protects individuals from unlawful interference with their domestic environment.

Claimants argue that fossil fuel export emissions worsen heatwaves in ways that constitute such interference. They are calling on the federal government to develop a credible plan to phase out coal and gas exports.[4]

Indigenous Cultural Rights and Ecological Destruction

Article 27 of the ICCPR protects the rights of members of Indigenous communities to enjoy their own culture. The UN Human Rights Committee has interpreted this provision to encompass connections to land, water, and marine ecosystems.[12]

The Hard Truths case applies Article 27 protections to marine environments threatened by climate-driven ecological harm. It builds on the committee's earlier ruling that Australia violated Torres Strait Islanders' cultural rights through climate inaction. That precedent established that government omissions can constitute cultural rights violations under international law.

Pam Francis, a 25-year-old Narungga, Ngarrindjeri, and Kaurna woman, teaches Aboriginal children about language and Country. The 2025 South Australian algal bloom killed culturally significant totem species across her Sea Country.[5]

The bloom prevented Francis and her family from accessing and gathering on coastlines they have cared for across generations. Latisha Francis, also Narungga, Ngarrindjeri, and Kaurna, studies marine biology at the University of Adelaide.[13]

Latisha Francis has witnessed seagrass beds disappear and seasonal patterns shift across her lifetime. The algal bloom severed direct cultural connections between living Sea Country and traditional ecological knowledge. Both women report significant mental distress as the marine ecosystems they are custodians of continue to deteriorate.

Professor Anne Poelina, a Nyikina Warrwa and Warlungurru woman, chairs the Martuwarra Fitzroy River Council. In 2023, the worst floods in the Kimberley region's recorded history inundated her home community at Balginjirr.[5]

Sacred sites, food plants, and the graves of ancestors were submerged, displacing her community for almost three years. Rikki Dank, a Gudanji and Wakaya woman from the Barkly Tablelands, documents how extreme heat disrupts intergenerational cultural knowledge. The Hard Truths complaint asks the committee to recognise these harms as ICCPR cultural rights violations.

Policy Disconnections and Economic Transition Strategy

Australia's statutory net-zero target covers domestic territorial emissions and sets a 2050 endpoint. Its 2030 Nationally Determined Contribution commits to a 43% reduction below 2005 domestic emission levels.[7]

Neither target includes any mechanism to cap, phase down, or account for fossil fuel export emissions. The government has continued approving new coal mines and expanding gas extraction since those targets were set. In 2025-26, the North West Shelf gas project received a major operational extension, confirmed after the federal election.[7]

These approvals are structurally incompatible with the ICJ's due diligence standard for State climate obligations. Climate Action Tracker rates Australia's overall climate performance as Insufficient across all assessment categories.[7]

The tracker identifies continued fossil fuel export support as a central driver of Australia's climate inadequacy. Energy Minister Chris Bowen has described Australia's ambition as becoming a renewable energy superpower. Federal budgets continue to allocate approximately AUD 14.5 billion annually in fossil fuel production subsidies.

Green hydrogen, critical minerals, and renewable electricity are identified as potential clean export alternatives.[3]

Concrete production timelines, capacity targets, and transition frameworks for these industries remain underdeveloped. The government has announced no phased exit strategy from fossil fuel export revenues. Claimants argue this absence of planning constitutes a failure of the government's international obligations.

The UN Human Rights Committee will consider whether Australia's conduct is compatible with its ICCPR obligations. A finding against Australia would carry lasting diplomatic, legal, and political consequences.[3]

The Hard Truths case represents a decisive shift in how climate accountability is pursued in Australia. Domestic courts have declined to impose common law duties on federal climate policy decisions. International human rights law now offers a legal pathway that domestic jurisprudence has explicitly closed.

The case exposes a structural contradiction at the centre of Australian governance. The federal government endorses the ICJ's climate framework in UN resolutions while approving coal and gas projects that conflict with it. This contradiction is the precise argument the Hard Truths complaint places before the Human Rights Committee.

The lived experiences of the ten claimants illustrate the cost of that policy inaction. A blind man was trapped in a flooded Brisbane building for ten days without power or egress. First Nations women have watched their Sea Country and cultural practices diminished by warming oceans and toxic blooms.

The committee carries no enforcement powers over Australia. A finding of ICCPR violations would nonetheless carry lasting legal, diplomatic, and political consequences. It would establish that Australia's fossil fuel export policy is incompatible with its international human rights obligations, creating a standard that legislators and courts cannot easily set aside.

References

1. The Guardian, Trapped by floods and fearing death in the heat: the Australians taking legal action over the climate crisis (The Guardian, 2026). Primary news report covering the ten claimants' experiences and the launch of the Hard Truths UN complaint.

2. Climate Analytics, Australia's Global Fossil Fuel Carbon Footprint (Climate Analytics, 2024). Quantifies Australia's exported CO2 emissions at 1.15 billion tonnes in 2023 and total climate footprint at 4.5% of global fossil CO2.

3. O. Sutcliffe and A. Macintosh, Ten Australians are taking the government to the UN over fossil fuel exports. What is their case? (The Conversation, 2026). Explains the ICCPR framework, the committee's 18-expert review process, and the legal arguments advanced by claimants.

4. Human Rights Law Centre, Ten Australians file historic "Hard Truths" case over Australian coal and gas exports at United Nations (HRLC, 2026). Official press release detailing the claimants, the legal arguments, and the demands placed before the UN Human Rights Committee.

5. Earthjustice, Fossil Fuel Exports at Center of UN Human Rights Case Against Australian Government (Earthjustice, 2026). Co-counsel press release documenting the individual claimants' stories and Earthjustice's legal argument regarding the ICJ advisory opinion.

6. Human Rights Law Centre, Federal Court determines the Commonwealth owes no duty of care to protect Torres Strait Islanders from climate change (HRLC, 2025). Case summary of Pabai v Commonwealth (No 2) [2025] FCA 796, in which Justice Wigney ruled on 15 July 2025 that emissions targets fall within core government policy.

7. Climate Action Tracker, Australia Country Assessment (Climate Action Tracker, 2025). Independent assessment rating Australia's overall climate performance as Insufficient, with analysis of subsidy levels, NDC targets, and export policy gaps.

8. Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide, Obligations of States in Respect of Climate Change, Advisory Opinion (ICJ, 23 July 2025) (ELAW, 2026). Summary and analysis of the ICJ advisory opinion confirming States' binding obligation to prevent significant climate harm and the stringent due diligence standard.

9. Primary Industries and Regions South Australia, Harmful Algal Bloom (HAB) Situation Update (PIRSA, 2025-2026). Official situation updates confirming the marine heatwave commenced September 2024 with sea temperatures approximately 2.5 degrees Celsius above average.

10. Wikipedia contributors, 2025 algal bloom in South Australia (Wikipedia, 2025-2026). Comprehensive record of the Karenia mikimotoi bloom's extent, ecological impact on over 450 species, and cultural consequences for First Nations communities.

11. Earthjustice, Hard Truths: Brendon Donohue (Earthjustice, 2026). Claimant profile detailing Donohue's experience of being trapped for 10 days during the 2022 Brisbane floods and his analysis of disability infrastructure failures.

12. Human Rights Law Centre, UN Human Rights Committee finds Australia violated Torres Strait Islanders' human rights over climate inaction (HRLC, 2022). Case summary of the committee's precedent-setting finding that Australia breached Torres Strait Islanders' cultural rights, providing the foundation for Article 27 claims in Hard Truths.

13. Earthjustice, Hard Truths: Latisha Francis (Earthjustice, 2026). Claimant profile documenting Latisha Francis's lifelong observations of ecological deterioration and the cultural severing caused by the South Australian algal bloom.

Back to top ↑

25/06/2026

Europe's Furnace: How Fossil Fuel Emissions Are Turning Summer Into a Continental Emergency - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Europe's 2026 dual heatwaves have killed dozens and exposed fossil fuel
 exporting nations including Australia to mounting accountability
Key Points
  • Europe's June 2026 heatwave drove temperatures above 43 degrees Celsius in France and shattered all-time records for June across multiple countries.[1]
  • Greenhouse gas forcing dominates Europe's long-term heatwave trend, contributing 0.87 additional heatwave days per decade across the continent since 1940.[2]
  • At least 40 people drowned in France alone as they sought relief in unsupervised waterways at the peak of the June 2026 crisis.[4]
  • Only around 20 per cent of European households have air conditioning, creating structural vulnerability during every significant heatwave event.[5]
  • Turin experienced repeated power grid blackouts as heat-stressed underground cables failed under record temperatures and surging demand loads.[12]
  • Europe is the world's fastest-warming continent, heating at roughly twice the global average rate, with heatwave events like those of 2026 projected to become annual features by mid-century.[3]

Europe is enduring its most dangerous heatwave season on record in 2026. 

Two heat dome events struck the continent within five weeks, driving temperatures 10 to 15 degrees Celsius above seasonal norms. 

France, the United Kingdom, Spain, and Portugal set springtime and early-summer temperature records without historical parallel.[1]

The second heatwave, which began on 22 June 2026, proved more severe than its May predecessor. Météo-France compared the June event directly to the August 2003 crisis, which killed approximately 15,000 people in France alone. It described the 2026 event as likely to surpass 2003 in maximum intensity.[3]

Australia's relationship to this unfolding catastrophe is both geographically remote and economically direct. As a major coal and liquefied natural gas exporter, Australia contributes materially to global emissions driving these events. Rapid climate attribution science now allows researchers to trace those contributions to specific, lethal outcomes.

The Fingerprint of Emissions: Attribution Science and Australian Responsibility

Rapid attribution science is a branch of climate research that quantifies human influence on specific extreme weather events. For the 2026 European heatwaves, the scientific consensus was unequivocal and immediate. Researchers confirmed that anthropogenic warming both raised the likelihood of such events and amplified their severity.[3]

A 2026 study in Environmental Research Letters found greenhouse gas forcing is the dominant driver of European heatwave trends since 1940. The research recorded a trend of 0.87 additional heatwave days per decade driven overwhelmingly by cumulative greenhouse gas emissions. Reductions in aerosol pollution since the 1980s have amplified this warming signal across Western Europe.[2]

Earlier attribution studies provide the methodological foundation for these findings. A study of the 2003 European heatwave found human-caused emissions more than doubled its probability of occurrence. Research published in Nature Communications found that more persistent double jet stream states, driven by Arctic warming from greenhouse gases, explain much of the accelerated European heatwave trend since 2003.[10]

Australia is among the world's largest exporters of thermal coal and liquefied natural gas. Both commodities, when combusted abroad, add directly to the global atmospheric emissions driving European heatwave intensification. Federal greenhouse gas accounting excludes these export emissions, systematically understating Australia's true contribution to global atmospheric loading.

Systematic attribution research now links major fossil fuel producers to specific proportions of global temperature rise. Governments that extract and export fossil fuels face growing legal scrutiny over their contribution to measurable harm. Australia's thermal coal exports to Asia and Europe position it as a material participant in the chain of causation.

Extreme heatwave events comparable in severity to the June 2026 European crisis were once statistically rare. They now recur almost annually across the continent, with each event delivering measurable deaths, economic losses, and infrastructure damage. The science linking this acceleration to cumulative fossil fuel combustion is established beyond reasonable scientific dispute.

Australia's obligations under the Paris Agreement framework are becoming increasingly concrete. The ability to attribute specific harm to specific emissions sources is advancing rapidly, providing the evidentiary basis for international climate liability claims. Australia's emissions profile, including exported fossil fuels, will feature prominently in that emerging legal landscape.

The Omega Block: Atmospheric Mechanics of a Destabilised Climate

The 2026 European heatwaves were produced by a meteorological feature known as an omega block. This pattern occurs when a ridge of high pressure becomes lodged between two low-pressure systems, bending the jet stream into a shape resembling the Greek letter omega. The jet stream, which normally transports weather systems eastward, became effectively immobilised.[6]

Samantha Burgess of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts described the pattern as the atmospheric equivalent of a traffic jam. Hot air drawn from the Saharan interior accumulated beneath the high-pressure lid rather than dispersing. Each successive day began warmer than the last, and nights offered the human body little recovery time.[6]

The 2026 event closely mirrors the atmospheric mechanics that drove the catastrophic 2003 European heatwave. In both cases, persistent anticyclonic conditions suppressed convection, eliminated cloud cover, and promoted intense solar heating at the surface. Soil moisture depletion following a drier-than-average spring in 2026 further amplified surface temperatures across the continent.[11]

The 2021 Pacific Northwest heatwave, which killed hundreds across Canada and the United States, shared the same omega block mechanism. Attribution studies found that event virtually impossible in a pre-industrial climate. The structural similarity between the 2003, 2021, and 2026 blocking events confirms the omega block as a key pathway through which climate change delivers lethal outcomes.

Research published in Nature Communications found that more persistent double jet states over Eurasia explain almost all of the accelerated Western European heatwave trend since 2003. Arctic amplification, caused by disproportionate warming at high latitudes, contracts the atmospheric temperature gradient and may be altering jet stream persistence. This dynamic links Australian export emissions to altered circulation patterns far beyond the continent.[10]

A developing El Nino-like pattern in the Pacific in 2026 amplified the atmospheric conditions underpinning the European heat dome. This pattern pushed the African subtropical high-pressure system further north than typical for June. The interaction between El Nino-driven anomalies and an already-warmed baseline temperature produced temperature records broken by several degrees simultaneously across multiple nations.[11]

Australia is directly familiar with omega block dynamics through its own extreme heat history. The 2019 to 2020 Black Summer bushfire crisis was preceded by persistent high-pressure blocking over the continent. The same thermodynamic processes now operating with greater frequency over Europe are a feature of Australian summers with which emergency managers have long contended.

Infrastructure Under Thermal Stress: Grids, Cables, and Cooling Systems

European electricity infrastructure endured severe stress during both the May and June 2026 heatwaves. In Turin, thermal stress to underground power cables caused repeated blackouts as temperatures overwhelmed local grid capacity. The failures exposed the vulnerability of buried urban electrical infrastructure to sustained extreme heat.[12]

France's electricity market registered acute pressure during the May event. Day-ahead electricity prices surged 29 per cent on 27 May as cooling demand spiked and reduced wind power generation constrained supply. The price shock demonstrated how heatwaves simultaneously suppress renewable output while pushing peak demand to critical levels.[1]

France's nuclear fleet faces a structural vulnerability during heatwaves. River water used to cool reactor cores rises in temperature during sustained heat events, reducing cooling efficiency and triggering regulatory restrictions on thermal discharge. France's national energy supplier, EDF, has been directed by safety authorities to improve adaptation to global warming across its reactor fleet.[7]

The cooling infrastructure deficit extends from power generation to the residential sector. Approximately 20 per cent of European households have air conditioning, compared with around 90 per cent in the United States. This gap transforms every significant heatwave into a life-threatening event for tens of millions of people across the continent.[5]

London's Underground railway network recorded carriage temperatures of 34.3 degrees Celsius during the May 2026 event. The network, built in the Victorian era, has mechanical ventilation systems inadequate for contemporary heat extremes. Scores of commuters required medical assistance across London and Paris transit networks during peak heat periods.[1]

Australia's own energy infrastructure carries analogous vulnerabilities. The Australian Energy Market Operator has documented grid stress during South Australian and New South Wales heatwaves as demand spikes test system capacity. Australian transmission infrastructure, like European equivalents, was engineered against historical climate baselines now being systematically exceeded.

The financial cost of infrastructure adaptation across Europe is substantial and rising. Retrofitting cooling systems, hardening grid cables, and upgrading rail networks for sustained temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius requires multi-decade investment programmes running to hundreds of billions of euros. Australia faces proportionate capital expenditure requirements as its own climate baseline continues to shift.

The Mortality Burden: Inequality Inscribed in Heat

At least 40 people drowned in France during the June 2026 heatwave as they sought relief in unsupervised waterways. The dead were predominantly young people, according to French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu. Two children aged two and four were found unconscious in a family car in Carpentras, southeastern France, and died despite resuscitation attempts.[4]

Three elderly residents aged 80 to 95 died in the Bordeaux region from heat-related causes during the same period. At least 18 direct heat deaths were confirmed in France by 23 June 2026, including five fatalities during outdoor sporting events. The United Kingdom reported at least 15 water-related fatalities during the May event alone.[1]

The European mortality burden from heat is substantial in any year and rising. In 2022, researchers estimated between 60,000 and 70,000 heat-related deaths across the continent. In 2025, approximately 24,400 heat deaths were recorded, with around 16,500 attributed by researchers to anthropogenic climate change.[5]

Elderly people are the primary victims of European heatwaves. Research covering 34 European countries found approximately 89.4 per cent of heat-related deaths between 2010 and 2022 occurred among people aged 65 or older. Southern and Eastern Europe recorded the highest absolute mortality figures, reflecting both climate exposure and healthcare access gaps.[9]

The distribution of heat mortality follows socioeconomic fault lines with precision. Low-income households, residents of dense urban housing, and people denied access to air conditioning face disproportionate thermal exposure. The 2003 French heatwave established that isolation, poverty, and substandard building stock compound heat lethality across disadvantaged communities.

European health systems adjusted emergency protocols during the June 2026 crisis. Hospital emergency departments expanded staffing and triage capacity for heatstroke, cardiovascular collapse, and respiratory failure. The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies issued formal warnings that extreme temperatures posed serious health risks to thousands across the continent.[4]

Australia's aged care sector carries parallel structural vulnerabilities. The 2021 Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety identified inadequate cooling as a significant risk in residential facilities. Heat mortality in Australian care facilities during summer peaks reflects the same dynamics now producing mass casualties across Europe.

Fields Going Fallow: Agriculture, Water, and Food System Disruption

The 2026 European heatwaves arrived during critical windows of crop development across France, Germany, and the Iberian Peninsula. Prolonged heat during grain fill stages accelerates maturation, forces premature harvest, and reduces kernel weight in wheat and barley crops. Rapid soil moisture evaporation during the May event triggered early drought conditions across the European agricultural belt.[11]

Austria recorded significantly below-average rainfall between May and June 2026, with some regions between half and two-thirds below the 1991 to 2020 precipitation average. Soil desiccation at critical crop growth stages threatens yields in central European grain-producing regions. The compounding effect of consecutive dry and hot seasons is accelerating landscape degradation across the continent.[1]

Alpine glacier mass balance provides a longer-term signal of regional water system stress. During the May 2026 heatwave, the zero-degree altitude isotherm, the elevation above which temperatures remain below freezing, rose to 4,328 metres, the third-highest May reading on record. Accelerated glacier melt threatens the seasonal river flows sustaining irrigation water supplies across Mediterranean agricultural regions.[1]

The Rhine, Po, and Loire river systems face chronic low-flow conditions during European heatwaves. Reduced river levels constrain industrial cooling water withdrawals, impede inland shipping logistics, and intensify competition between agricultural and municipal water users. These constraints cascade into output reductions across the European food production zone.

Australia holds a direct stake in European agricultural disruption. When European wheat, barley, and olive production declines, global commodity prices shift and Australian grain exporters face both opportunity and supply chain exposure. The structural fragility of European food production under intensifying heat signals long-term instability relevant to Australia's agrifood export relationships.

The Iberian Peninsula faces a particularly acute water security crisis. Portugal expanded emergency wildfire and drought warnings across nearly all districts during the June 2026 event, citing very high fire danger alongside severe public health threats. Spain and Portugal, already experiencing structural aridification, face accelerating desertification of their agricultural heartlands under projected mid-century temperature increases.[1]

Legal conflicts between agricultural water users and municipal authorities are intensifying across Southern Europe. Aquifer depletion driven by irrigation extraction is colliding with urban water security requirements as river flows decline. Litigation between farming sectors and water regulators over allocation rights is becoming a defining feature of European climate adaptation policy.

Fire, Ice, and Cascading Ecosystems

The June 2026 heatwave placed France and the entire Iberian Peninsula under formal wildfire emergency status. Emergency services across France, Portugal, and Spain mobilised for wildfire response as vegetation moisture fell to critical thresholds. Scientists warned that climate change was exacerbating the frequency and intensity of fire-conducive conditions across southeastern Europe.[3]

Portugal expanded its wildfire risk warnings to nearly all districts during the June event, citing very high fire danger alongside severe public health threats. The Alentejo and Algarve regions, among the most arid in Western Europe, recorded near-nationwide tropical nights as minimum temperatures remained above 20 degrees Celsius. Vegetation across the Peninsula was critically desiccated by consecutive dry months preceding the heat dome.[1]

European wildfires release carbon dioxide, methane, and black carbon into the atmosphere, creating a feedback that intensifies the warming driving the fires. The European Space Agency's Copernicus Sentinel-3 satellite tracked surface temperature anomalies across cities including Madrid and Paris during the May event, recording extensive areas well above 30 degrees Celsius. Fire-driven carbon emissions represent a compounding atmospheric loading that standard national accounting frameworks fail to capture.[5]

Alpine ecosystems are registering irreversible losses under successive extreme heat seasons. Swiss and Austrian glaciers recorded accelerating mass balance deficits in recent years, compounded further by the 2026 season. Glacier retreat reduces the snowmelt contributions that sustain river base flows during late summer, deepening agricultural and municipal water stress.

Thermally sensitive fauna and flora face localised population collapses during prolonged extreme heat. Cold-water fish species in Alpine rivers endure acute stress when water temperatures exceed physiological tolerance thresholds. Pollinator populations, including honeybee colonies critical to European agricultural productivity, face elevated mortality during sustained heat events that disrupt foraging and colony thermoregulation.

Australia's 2019 to 2020 Black Summer provides a direct parallel for the ecosystem consequences now unfolding in Europe. An estimated three billion animals were killed or displaced during that crisis. Satellite monitoring recorded fire-driven carbon emissions of approximately 900 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent from that single season, demonstrating the scale of carbon feedback that unchecked fire seasons deliver.

The ecological disruption from fire, heat, and drought operates across multiple trophic levels simultaneously. Soil microbiome loss, forest canopy reduction, and wetland desiccation degrade ecosystem resilience over timeframes measured in decades. Europe's remaining old-growth forest patches face accelerating losses under climate trajectories that exceed 2 degrees Celsius of global warming.

Policy Failure: From Brussels to Canberra

France introduced a national heat health action plan following the catastrophic 2003 heatwave. The plan established tiered alert systems, emergency service protocols, and welfare checks on isolated elderly residents. Yet the June 2026 event overwhelmed those systems, with 54 of France's 96 mainland departments placed under the highest red alert level simultaneously.[3]

A 2024 briefing from the European Environment Agency found that most Northern European countries still have yet to develop comprehensive heat health action plans and early warning systems. The agency identified persistent gaps in targeted protection for elderly people, the primary victims of heat mortality. Administrative acknowledgement of vulnerable groups has consistently outpaced actual protective action across the European Union.[8]

The European Green Deal, adopted in 2019, allocated substantial funding to climate adaptation. Actual localised spending on heat-proofing housing, expanding urban canopy, and retrofitting cooling infrastructure has fallen far short of stated ambitions. The gap between adaptation rhetoric and adaptation investment has widened precisely as the frequency and severity of climate impacts has intensified.[11]

Urban planning law is under rapid revision across several European cities in response to successive heat crises. Paris, Barcelona, and Vienna have introduced canopy cover targets, green roof mandates, and cool pavement requirements into building codes. These measures represent necessary but belated recognition that the built environment has amplified rather than mitigated heat mortality for decades.

Cross-border emergency resource-sharing mechanisms faced severe pressure during the simultaneous June 2026 wildfire alerts across France, Portugal, and Spain. Each country's emergency services operated at full domestic capacity, limiting mutual aid between European civil protection systems. The simultaneous nature of the crisis, produced by a single heat dome, exposed the limits of national emergency architecture designed for isolated incidents.

Australia's own policy record on heat adaptation carries structural parallels to the European failures the 2026 events exposed. The national coordination of heat health action planning under federal frameworks lacks mandatory implementation standards binding on state and local governments. Parliamentary inquiries have repeatedly identified aged care, public housing, and outdoor workers as groups denied adequate heat protection.

Australia's expansion of fossil fuel export capacity alongside inadequate domestic climate adaptation creates a pattern of governance failure. Approving new coal export projects while failing to protect communities from heat contradicts both domestic and international law obligations. Europe's dead represent the measure of the price already being paid for decisions of exactly this kind.

Europe's 2026 heatwaves demonstrate what unmitigated anthropogenic warming delivers to a modern continent. Mass casualty events, infrastructure failure, agricultural disruption, and ecosystem degradation unfolded simultaneously across a densely populated region. The attribution science is clear, the meteorological mechanisms are documented, and the socioeconomic fault lines determining who dies are well established.

Australia is a material participant in this crisis. Its thermal coal and LNG exports contribute to the cumulative atmospheric loading making events like this more frequent and lethal. Attribution science is advancing toward the evidentiary standards required for international climate liability, and Australia's fossil fuel export profile places it squarely within that frame.

The governance failures exposed across Europe are mirrored in Australia. Heat health action plans without mandatory force and adaptation funding without proportionate disbursement describe both policy landscapes. Each summer that passes without structural reform narrows the options available to policymakers and the populations they govern.

The deaths in France, the blackouts in Turin, and the burning forests of Iberia are documented realities. They represent the compounding consequences of emissions decisions made over decades in countries including Australia. Australia must determine whether governance capacity exists to prevent identical outcomes on its own soil.

References

1. Wikipedia, 2026 European Heatwaves (Wikimedia Foundation, 2026). Comprehensive factual record of temperature extremes, deaths, and infrastructure impacts during the May and June 2026 European heatwave events, including the Turin grid blackouts and Austria precipitation deficits.

2. Huntingford et al., Increase in European Summer Heatwaves Driven by Greenhouse Gases and Amplified by Aerosol Emission Reductions (Environmental Research Letters, 2026). Attributes the dominant share of Europe's heatwave trend since 1940 to greenhouse gas forcing, quantifying 0.87 additional heatwave days per decade.

3. NPR, A Red Alert over France, and Heat That May Rewrite the Record Books (NPR, 23 June 2026). Reports Météo-France comparisons to the 2003 heatwave, expert attribution statements from the ICARUS Climate Research Centre, and wildfire emergency mobilisations across the Iberian Peninsula.

4. Al Jazeera, France Records Hottest-Ever Day as 40 Drown Trying to Escape Heatwave (Al Jazeera, 23 June 2026). Documents the drowning toll, confirmed heat-related deaths including two children in Carpentras, and the IFRC warning on serious continental health risks.

5. Scientific American, Europe's Deadly Spring Heat Wave Is Obliterating Temperature Records (Scientific American, May 2026). Documents the May heatwave temperature records, the European household air conditioning deficit based on IEA data, and annual heat mortality figures including the 2025 figure of 24,400 deaths.

6. France24, What Is Driving Europe's Heatwave? (France24, 23 June 2026). Explains the omega block atmospheric mechanism via statements from ECMWF climate scientist Samantha Burgess and UK Met Office chief meteorologist Will Lang.

7. Clean Energy Wire, France Caught Between National and European Energy Ambitions (Clean Energy Wire, 2026). Documents heatwave-related constraints on French nuclear reactor cooling systems and EDF's regulatory obligations to adapt to global warming.

8. European Environment Agency, Heat and Health: Evidence and Health Effects (European Climate and Health Observatory, 2024). Summarises European heat mortality data and persistent gaps in national heat health action plans across Northern European countries.

9. Zhang et al., Future Heat-Related Mortality in Europe Driven by Compound Day-Night Heatwaves and Demographic Shifts (PMC, 2025). Projects rising heat mortality across 34 European countries and finds 89.4 per cent of heat deaths between 2010 and 2022 occurred among people aged 65 or older.

10. Rousi et al., Accelerated Western European Heatwave Trends Linked to More-Persistent Double Jets over Eurasia (Nature Communications, 2022). Finds that increasing persistence of double jet stream states, linked to Arctic amplification from anthropogenic warming, explains most of the accelerated Western European heatwave trend since 2003.

11. CNN, France Restricts Public Drinking as Europe Swelters under a Heat-Dome Driven Furnace (CNN, 22 June 2026). Reports on the June 2026 heat dome's mechanism, Spain and Portugal temperature peaks, societal impacts across France, and the El Nino amplification factor.

12. Mappr, Extreme Heatwave Grips Europe in June 2026: Mapping the Peak Temperatures (Mappr, 23 June 2026). Maps peak heatwave temperatures across Europe and documents repeated power grid blackouts in Turin caused by heat-stressed underground cables.

Back to top ↑

24/06/2026

Climate's Long Front Line: How Rising Heat and Seas Are Remaking the Australian Defence Force - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Climate change has degraded Australian Defence Force readiness
and is reshaping Australia's Indo-Pacific security posture
Key Points
  • Climate events have already damaged ADF force preparedness, readiness, and combat effectiveness, according to the 2023 Defence Strategic Review.[1]
  • More than 35,100 ADF personnel have been deployed on domestic relief operations since 2019, exceeding half the permanent workforce of approximately 62,000.[2]
  • Pacific island nations including Tuvalu, Kiribati, and the Marshall Islands face at least 15 centimetres of sea-level rise within 30 years, with 95 per cent of their infrastructure at extreme risk.[9]
  • Darwin is projected to experience up to 129 additional days above 35°C annually by 2050, threatening basing viability and training safety across the ADF's northern operations.[5]
  • Australia imports 91 per cent of its refined fuel needs from overseas, creating a critical strategic vulnerability at the heart of ADF operational logistics.[7]
  • Defence committed to a 43 per cent emissions reduction by 2030 and net zero by 2050 under its October 2024 Net Zero and Future Energy Strategies.[6]


The Australian Defence Force stands at an unprecedented inflection point. 

Climate change is simultaneously stressing its equipment, exhausting its people, and reshaping the geopolitical environment it exists to manage. 

What began as a humanitarian footnote in strategic planning has become a structural challenge to Australia's core defence mission.

The evidence accumulated since 2019 demands accounting. Repeated domestic disaster deployments have consumed training time, maintenance budgets, and personnel capacity. 

The Indo-Pacific's strategic geometry is simultaneously being redrawn by rising seas, extreme heat, and intensifying geopolitical competition.

Australia's 2023 Defence Strategic Review was the most candid official acknowledgement that climate change had entered the hard security domain. 

It confirmed that climate events were already measurably damaging the ADF's capacity to defend Australia. 

What remains inadequately answered is whether the institutional response will match the scale of the threat.

Operational Overstretch and Domestic Resilience

Climate change has fundamentally altered the operational tempo of the Australian Defence Force. Catastrophic bushfires, recurring floods, and intensifying cyclones have repeatedly diverted military assets from combat preparation. 

The 2023 Defence Strategic Review found this pattern has damaged force preparedness, readiness, and combat effectiveness.[1]

A Department of Defence submission to a parliamentary inquiry revealed a defining statistic. More than 35,100 ADF personnel have participated in domestic relief operations since 2019.[2]

That figure exceeds half the ADF's permanent workforce of approximately 62,000 people. The scale of repeated deployment has placed untenable pressure on training cycles and asset availability. Concurrent disaster activations compound the strain on logistics, maintenance, and personnel scheduling.[3]

Operation Bushfire Assist in 2019-20 marked a structural inflection point in civilian expectations of the ADF. The Black Summer fires triggered the largest domestic military activation in ADF peacetime history.[4]

Successive Operation Flood Assist deployments followed across Queensland, New South Wales, and Victoria in 2021, 2022, and 2024. Army engineers, helicopter crews, and transport units absorbed months of disaster response work in each activation. Training schedules were repeatedly cancelled or curtailed to meet civilian support requirements.

The 2023 DSR directed that Defence must serve as last resort only for domestic civil emergencies.[1]

The Albanese government subsequently established the National Emergency Management Agency to lead disaster coordination. This transfer of primary responsibility aims to protect ADF readiness for its core defence mission. Building civilian capacity sufficient to replace ADF domestic roles will require years of sustained investment.[11]

Strategic Geopolitics and Indo-Pacific Security

Climate change has accelerated geopolitical competition across Australia's immediate strategic neighbourhood. Rising seas threaten the existence of low-lying Pacific island states, generating conditions for instability and forced displacement. Every major climate event in the region multiplies demands on Australian diplomatic and military resources.

Tuvalu, Kiribati, and the Marshall Islands face an acute existential threat from sea-level rise. NASA projections indicate these nations will experience at least 15 centimetres of sea-level rise within three decades.[9]

Across Kiribati, the Marshall Islands, and Tuvalu, 95 per cent of all infrastructure sits below 10 metres elevation.[9]

China has exploited this climate vulnerability through targeted aid diplomacy across the Pacific. Nauru severed recognition of Taiwan in January 2024 after China reportedly committed US$100 million in financial aid.[10]

Solomon Islands and Kiribati made similar switches in 2019. China committed approximately US$500 million to the Solomon Islands following recognition of Beijing.[10]

Australia remains the Pacific's largest aid donor, providing approximately 40 per cent of total external assistance to Pacific island countries.[10]

The 2023 DSR identified climate change as a driver of peacekeeping demands, civil unrest, and interstate conflict in Australia's region. This framing elevates climate risk from a humanitarian concern to a core operational planning requirement. The ADF's future regional posture must balance hard-security preparation against escalating disaster assistance demands.[11]

Equipment, Infrastructure, and Asset Vulnerability

Climate change is imposing measurable physical stress on ADF equipment and installations. Rising temperatures, increased humidity, and intensifying storm events degrade material performance and maintenance intervals. Northern Australian bases, already operating in some of Australia's harshest environments, face the sharpest projected changes.

Darwin is a critical strategic case. Modelling indicates Darwin could experience between 66 and 129 additional days above 35°C annually by 2050. This range depends on whether global warming reaches 2°C or 4°C.[5]

Extreme heat affects aircraft performance thresholds, munitions storage stability, and safe working limits for ground crews. The F-35A Joint Strike Fighter, central to RAAF combat capability, operates within manufacturer-specified thermal limits. As ambient temperatures rise, available flying days within those limits will decrease across northern bases.

Former Chief of the Defence Force Admiral Chris Barrie has warned that some ADF bases risk becoming uninhabitable. Coastal installations including HMAS Cairns and RAAF Base Darwin face compounding risks from sea-level rise and intensifying cyclonic storm surge.[12]

Australia imports approximately 91 per cent of its refined fuel needs from overseas, creating a critical vulnerability in ADF logistics.[7]

The 2023 DSR identified domestic fuel supply chains as a strategic vulnerability requiring urgent remediation. Extreme weather events have demonstrated their capacity to sever road and rail corridors used for fuel distribution to military installations. The government committed to establishing a whole-of-government fuel council to address this risk.[7]

Military equipment operating in humid tropical environments faces accelerating corrosion and material degradation. Increased maintenance intervals for naval vessels and helicopters operating in northern waters add pressure to already constrained budgets. Quantifying these climate-linked cost increases across the full ADF fleet remains a critical gap in public accountability.

Personnel Health, Readiness, and Wet-Bulb Limits

Rising temperatures pose an escalating physiological threat to ADF personnel deployed across northern Australia. The wet-bulb globe temperature (WBGT) metric captures combined heat and humidity stress and governs military training protocols. WBGT thresholds are projected to be breached more frequently at northern bases as the climate warms.[5]

Australian Army Research Centre modelling projects significant increases in days when wet-bulb temperatures exceed 30°C at northern military locations.[5]

At 30°C wet-bulb, full combat exertion becomes physiologically dangerous without enforced rest and hydration protocols. This threshold constrains loaded marches, amphibious landings, and all high-intensity training activities. The ADF's northern basing strategy is therefore vulnerable to climate-linked reduction in available safe training hours.

Loaded marches under moderate WBGT conditions have been shown to produce heat casualties among fit, trained soldiers. The risk intensifies sharply once wet-bulb temperature exceeds military policy limits. This threshold will be breached more frequently at northern Australian bases as the climate continues to warm.[5]

Exercise Talisman Sabre, the largest biennial ADF-United States military exercise, operates across Darwin, Rockhampton, and Shoalwater Bay in July. All three locations present extreme heat and humidity that will intensify as global temperatures rise. Warming climates are also expanding the range of tropical vector-borne diseases relevant to ADF medical doctrine and personnel health.[12]

The ADF's permanent workforce stood at 61,189 as of July 2025, against a government target of 69,000 by the 2030s. In 2024-25, more than 75,000 applied but only 7,059 enlisted, limited by stringent standards and long processing times.[15]

Concurrent climate demands on the force compound the difficulty of building the sustained workforce the National Defence Strategy requires.

Decarbonisation, Energy Security, and Net-Zero Targets

The ADF consumed approximately 310 megalitres of fuel in 2020-21, establishing it as a major fossil fuel importer. Air Force aviation fuel accounted for 215 megalitres, more than six per cent of Australia's entire aviation turbine fuel market.[8]

Australia imports 91 per cent of its refined fuel needs, linking ADF operational capability directly to foreign supply chains.[7]

In October 2024, the Department of Defence released its Net Zero Strategy and Future Energy Strategy. Both commit Defence to a 43 per cent emissions reduction by 2030 and net zero by 2050.[6]

The Future Energy Strategy named sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) and renewable diesel as the primary near-term pathway for ADF decarbonisation. SAF can reduce lifecycle emissions by up to 80 per cent compared to conventional jet fuel.[7]

SAF and renewable diesel are classified as drop-in fuels, requiring no modifications to existing aircraft, ship, or vehicle fuel systems. This characteristic makes them the lowest-risk near-term option for ADF fleet decarbonisation.[14]

Australia produces zero SAF domestically, creating reliance on fragile global supply chains and fuel priced far above conventional jet fuel.[7]

Developing a domestic SAF production capability would simultaneously address climate commitments and fuel security concerns. Lowy Institute analysis proposes that Defence's demand signal could underpin a domestic SAF industry. Surplus production could then serve commercial aviation during peacetime, giving decarbonisation a security logic beyond environmental compliance.[7]

Coalition Interoperability and Alliance Pressures

Climate change is testing the cohesion of Australia's core defence alliances. Divergent rates of adaptation across the AUKUS partnership and Five Eyes network create asymmetries in capability, doctrine, and equipment standards. The ADF must align with allies while managing its own structural climate constraints.

The United States Department of Defense has published its Climate Risk Analysis, identifying climate change as a security threat multiplier. Subsequent shifts in US administration priorities have introduced uncertainty into climate policy alignment across the AUKUS partnership. The ADF must navigate these dynamics while sustaining its commitments under the Defence Net Zero Strategy.[6]

Within the Five Eyes intelligence alliance, climate-related security collaboration is gaining analytical visibility as a distinct priority. The Australian Security Leaders Climate Group has called for a wartime-scale approach to climate defence that includes dedicated intelligence resourcing.[12]

Australia's Tuvalu-Australia Falepili Union Treaty, signed in November 2023, combined climate and security commitments in a landmark bilateral arrangement. Australia committed to support Tuvalu against military aggression, natural disaster, or public health emergencies. The treaty also grants Australia the right to vet potential security agreements Tuvalu considers with other states.[11]

Climate adaptation disparities between the ADF and Pacific island militaries challenge joint humanitarian and disaster relief (HADR) missions. Pacific island forces operate with limited logistical capacity, requiring Australia to assume the lead role in most regional disaster responses.[13]

The ABCA Armies programme standardises military equipment, doctrine, and operational procedures across America, Britain, Canada, and Australia. Embedding climate resilience into ABCA standards for extreme-heat operations will grow in importance as the ADF modernises its fleets. This alignment ensures future Australian hardware acquisitions are tested against the environments in which they will actually operate.

Australia has committed $14 billion to hardening its northern bases for US force rotations under the AUKUS agreement. Climate adaptation must be integrated into this investment programme from the outset, rather than retrofitted later at greater cost. Failure to do so would produce infrastructure that becomes operationally marginal before its planned service life concludes.[12]

Governance, Accountability, and Strategic Doctrine

Governance of climate risk within the Department of Defence remains inadequately transparent and resourced. The 2023 DSR devoted a dedicated chapter to climate change but withheld many specific judgements in its classified version. This classification limits public scrutiny of the rigour with which climate risk is integrated into Defence planning.[1]

The unclassified DSR acknowledged that its full version contained sensitive material requiring classification. The public document confirmed climate events were damaging ADF readiness but gave limited guidance on mitigation timelines or cost allocations.[1]

The October 2024 Defence Net Zero Strategy and Future Energy Strategy are Defence's most specific public climate governance documents. These outline emissions reduction pathways but provide limited detail on enforcement mechanisms or financial consequences for non-compliance.[6]

The 2024 NDS directed ADF bases to achieve two explicit objectives: climate adaptation and energy resilience. Former Chief of the Defence Force Admiral Chris Barrie has called for a wartime-scale approach to climate defence planning. He has cited ADF training bases at risk of becoming uninhabitable as a concrete planning failure.[12]

Defence procurement remains a critical governance vulnerability. Existing procurement guidelines lack publicly verifiable requirements to test all new hardware operationally above 50°C. The Boxer combat vehicle and F-35A were both designed primarily for temperate European or North American environments.

The 2024 NDS committed to biennial National Defence Strategy updates, providing a mechanism for incorporating evolving climate science. The 2026 NDS was forecast to address whole-of-nation preparedness, including climate risk as a distinct security domain.[12]

Australia lacks a National Security Strategy that would anchor climate risk governance across all agencies beyond Defence alone. ASPI's Climate and Security Policy Centre has argued that climate change will undermine all other security objectives without adequate resourcing. Resolving this governance gap is the central accountability challenge of Australia's climate security posture.[12]

Climate change is reshaping Australian defence capability at every level. From individual soldier readiness to Indo-Pacific strategic geometry, the threat is comprehensive and accelerating. The threat multiplier identified in the 2023 DSR is already degrading force preparedness and enabling geopolitical competitors.

The governance framework remains inadequate to the task. The Net Zero and Future Energy Strategies are welcome steps, yet carry no legally enforceable compliance mechanisms. The most sensitive climate assessments remain classified, limiting public accountability.

Genuine climate resilience within the ADF requires investment across doctrine, medical preparedness, procurement standards, and personnel strategy simultaneously. Incremental adjustment within existing structures will produce incremental failure against an accelerating threat.

The central question Australia faces is whether Defence's climate governance will match the ambition its own strategic reviews have demanded. The 2026 National Defence Strategy provides the next critical accountability test. A comprehensive, publicly accountable, and enforceable climate security framework is the standard any future review must meet.

References

1. Department of Defence, National Defence: Defence Strategic Review 2023 (Commonwealth of Australia, 2023). Australia's most significant recent strategic assessment, publicly confirming that climate events have damaged ADF force preparedness, readiness, and combat effectiveness, and directing the ADF to serve as last resort in domestic disasters.

2. Mahon, R., A Climate Security Priority: Australia's Need for Balanced Domestic Disaster Infrastructure, RSIS Policy Report IP24013 (S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, 2024). Analyses the Department of Defence submission revealing that more than 35,100 ADF personnel participated in domestic relief operations since 2019, examining the structural risk this poses to military readiness.

3. Clarke, A.G., Military Challenges from Climate Change, Contemporary Issues in Air and Space Power, 1(1) (RAAF Air and Space Power Centre, 2022). Quantifies the increasing trend in ADF emergency first-response taskings using historical open-source data, demonstrating a clear correlation between rising Australian mean temperatures and expanding operational tempo.

4. Center for Climate and Security, MiRCH Update: Key Takeaways from Tracking Climate-Related Military Deployments (Center for Climate and Security, January 2024). Surveys global military climate deployments and documents the 2023 DSR's confirmation that climate events have negatively affected ADF force preparedness, readiness, and combat effectiveness.

5. Australian Army Research Centre, Climate Change and Army Personnel, Australian Army Journal 21(1) (AARC, 2024). Models the impact of rising temperatures on soldier health, training viability, and operational readiness at northern Australian bases, projecting Darwin may experience up to 129 additional days above 35°C annually by 2050.

6. Department of Defence, Defence Net Zero Strategy (Commonwealth of Australia, 2024). Sets out Defence's framework for reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 43 per cent by 2030 and achieving net zero by 2050 within the constraints of military capability, preparedness, and alliance interoperability.

7. Lowy Institute, Finding Opportunity in Australia's Liquid Fuel Security Challenge, The Interpreter (Lowy Institute, 2023). Examines Australia's 91 per cent dependence on imported refined fuel, analyses the strategic convergence between Defence fuel security and sustainable aviation fuel development, and proposes a domestic SAF production model.

8. Cole, B., Decreasing Reliance on Fossil Fuels to Increase Defence Capability, Air and Space Power Blog (RAAF Air and Space Power Centre, 2022). Documents ADF fuel consumption in FY 2020-21 and makes the strategic case for transitioning to sustainable aviation fuels as a means of increasing ADF capability and energy independence.

9. Vu, A. and Nishimoto, N., Pacific Islands Security in the Era of US-China Competition (East-West Center, 2025). Documents the existential climate vulnerability of Pacific island nations including Tuvalu, Kiribati, and the Marshall Islands, and analyses the security implications for Australia and its regional alliances.

10. Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Rising Seas, Rising Stakes: China and Australia Vying for Pacific Hearts in the Climate Crisis (Stanford University, 2025). Analyses China's use of climate-linked aid diplomacy to gain Pacific island diplomatic recognition and measures Australia's role as the region's largest overseas development assistance donor.

11. Center for Security Policy Studies, Perilous to Ignore: The Impacts of Climate Change on Australia's Security (George Mason University, 2024). Provides a comprehensive assessment of climate change as an Australian national security risk, including the DSR's identification of climate as a driver of potential peacekeeping demands and interstate conflict.

12. Desai, I., An Appeal for Climate Action in Australia's Next National Defence Strategy, The Strategist (ASPI, January 2026). Critiques the limited climate ambition in the 2024 National Defence Strategy, documents the $14 billion northern base hardening programme, and references Admiral Chris Barrie's call for wartime-scale climate defence planning.

13. The Cove, The ADF and Australian Disaster Relief in the 2020s and Beyond (Australian Army, 2024). Examines the ADF's dual role in domestic disaster relief and regional stability operations, exploring the capability and doctrine challenges of meeting both simultaneously in a climate-changed Indo-Pacific.

14. Conroy, P. (Minister for Defence Industry), Defence Net Zero Strategy and Future Energy Strategy Released, media release (Department of Defence, October 2024). Announces the complementary Net Zero and Future Energy Strategies, confirming low-carbon liquid fuels including sustainable aviation fuel as drop-in solutions requiring no modification to existing ADF platforms.

15. SBS News, The ADF Has 'Ambitions to Grow' but Can It Fix a 'Terribly Difficult' Geo-Strategic Climate? (SBS, August 2025). Reports on 2024-25 ADF recruitment and retention data including the workforce total of 61,189 as of July 2025, and expert assessment that concurrent domestic climate demands compound workforce challenges.

Back to top ↑

Lethal Heating is a citizens' initiative