18/06/2026

Australia's Vanishing Food Bowls: How Housing Growth Is Consuming the Farmland That Feeds Our Cities - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Key Points
  • Peri-urban agricultural land on Greater Sydney's fringe contracted from 292,644 to 99,519 hectares in just five years, a loss of 66 percent driven primarily by residential development.[2]
  • Under current housing development projections, Sydney stands to lose more than 90 percent of its locally produced vegetables as market gardens in designated growth areas are converted to residential subdivisions.[4]
  • Melbourne's fringe farmland currently produces 41 percent of the city's fresh fruit and vegetables, but that figure is projected to fall to approximately 15 percent by 2050 as urban sprawl consumes the productive inner food bowl.[6][7]
  • Rezoning farmland from primary production to high-density residential in Sydney's Blacktown City raises land value from $12,387 to $10.5 million per hectare, creating financial incentives that agriculture cannot overcome without legislative protection.[2]
  • CSIRO research confirms that heat stress reduces vegetable yields and worsens crop quality, compounding the food security risk as climate extremes intensify across Australia's already diminished productive farmland.[10]
  • Australia's National Climate Risk Assessment identifies food systems as a priority risk sector, yet no nationally enforceable standard requires state planning authorities to protect peri-urban agricultural land from residential conversion.[9]

Australia's city food bowls are vanishing under housing estates as climate risk makes local food production essential.

The gap between what planning systems protect and what food security requires is structural. 

Regulatory authority over land use sits with state governments. No federal framework legally protects peri-urban farmland from residential development.

As climate extremes intensify, that structural gap is producing a compounding crisis. Australia's most productive peri-urban farmland is disappearing precisely when climate disruption demands local food resilience. The two pressures are converging without a governance framework capable of managing either.

Australia has warmed by 1.47 degrees Celsius since 1910, with the rate of increase accelerating since mid-century.[1] 

Bureau of Meteorology records document more frequent and more intense heat extremes across every region of the continent. For food production, those trends translate directly into reduced yields, damaged crops, stressed livestock and disrupted supply chains.

The Promise That Failed

In 1951, New South Wales premier Joseph Cahill made a promise to parliament. Sydney's rural areas would be preserved for vital food production and soil conservation. Suburban expansion consumed those areas regardless.

Vineyards, dairies, market gardens, orchards and oyster leases once dotted the Sydney Basin.[3] 

The city's five million residents now rely almost entirely on food transported from distant production regions. Urban development has severed Sydney's connection to its own food supply across seven decades.

Greater Western Sydney has historically functioned as the food bowl of the metropolitan region. It produced vegetables, eggs, flowers, poultry and a substantial share of the city's fresh perishable produce. That productive capacity is contracting year by year under the weight of residential development.[2]

Western Sydney's population is projected to grow from 2.4 million in 2016 to 4.1 million by 2041. The NSW Department of Planning and Environment has forecast the region will supply roughly 60 percent of Greater Sydney's new dwellings through 2025.[2] 

Both projections apply simultaneously to the same land.

Local council policies to retain productive farmland have been set aside to accommodate state government growth plans.[5] 

The Greater Sydney Commission introduced the concept of Metropolitan Rural Areas to help preserve remaining peri-urban land. That concept remains advisory and carries no force in statutory local planning instruments.

Sydney metropolitan plans from the 2000s designated around 40 percent of peri-urban agricultural lands for residential conversion.[4] 

Almost half of all vegetable-producing land was either built over or earmarked for housing. More than 50 percent of Sydney's vegetable-growing enterprises now sit within designated growth centres.[4]

Australia's first National Climate Risk Assessment, released in 2025, identifies food systems as facing elevated risks across multiple dimensions.[9] 

Agricultural vulnerability to drought, flood, heat and supply chain disruption is extensively documented in that assessment. The planning decisions consuming Sydney's food bowl predate the assessment by decades but contradict its findings in real time.

Measured in Hectares

The scale of Sydney's peri-urban agricultural land loss is quantified and substantial. Peri-urban agricultural land on Greater Sydney's fringe fell from 292,644 hectares to 99,519 hectares in just five years.[2] 

That contraction of 193,124 hectares was driven primarily by residential development.

The land lost represents a reduction of approximately 66 percent in five years. Satellite imagery analysis confirmed the most severely affected areas were on the outskirts of Greater Western Sydney.[2] 

The rate of loss has continued in the years since that measurement was taken.

Approximately 60 percent of agricultural land in the Western Sydney food bowl was lost over just ten years.[5] 

That figure includes market gardens, vegetable farms, poultry enterprises and orchards that once supplied fresh produce to metropolitan consumers. Western Sydney accounts for three-quarters of all agricultural production across the Greater Sydney area.

By 2031, Sydney's food self-sufficiency could fall to just 6 percent under current development projections.[11] 

The city currently produces 20 percent of its own food within the Sydney Basin. Local fresh vegetable and egg supply would fall by more than 90 percent under approved development scenarios.[11]

Surrounding geography channels Sydney's urban growth into the peri-urban agricultural fringe.[4] 

Ocean, mountains and national parks prevent expansion in any direction other than west. The land most suitable for housing development is precisely the land most suitable for food production.

In Sydney's Blacktown City, rezoning farmland to high-density residential raises land value from $12,387 to $10.5 million per hectare.[2] 

That increase of close to 85,000 percent makes agricultural continuation economically irrational for most landholders without legislative protection. The financial arithmetic is decisive and operates regardless of food security considerations.

The Greater Sydney Commission's Metropolitan Rural Areas concept was introduced to manage this tension.[5] 

Local councils attempting to protect productive farmland have found their policies overridden by state government growth targets. A structural conflict between housing supply objectives and food production capacity persists without resolution.

Melbourne's Shrinking Table

Sydney's crisis has a parallel in Melbourne. Farming regions on Melbourne's fringe currently produce 41 percent of all fresh fruit and vegetables for the city.[6] 

Those regions are contracting under identical housing development pressure.

Foodprint Melbourne research divides the city's food bowl into inner and outer zones.[6] 

The inner zone includes Werribee, Sunbury, Wandin, Cranbourne and Clyde, where highly perishable leafy greens and berries are produced. The outer zone encompasses Meredith, Bacchus Marsh, Warragul and Kilmore.

By 2050, Melbourne's fringe farmland will produce little more than 15 percent of the city's food needs.[7] 

That projection is down from the 41 percent currently supplied. The population driving that demand is projected to reach 7 million or more by the same year.

The inner food bowl faces disproportionate pressure. Werribee South produces 85 percent of Victoria's cauliflowers but is encircled by expanding housing estates at Point Cook, Tarneit and Sanctuary Lakes.[8] 

Wyndham Vale, one of Australia's fastest growing suburbs, sits directly within that productive agricultural zone.

The financial incentives for converting farmland to housing in Melbourne mirror those in Sydney. A recent farm sale in Wyndham Vale fetched $95 million.[8] 

The developer economics of that transaction made continued agricultural use unviable for the vendor.

Deloitte modelling estimated that ongoing urban sprawl will reduce Melbourne's food bowl output by between $32 million and $111 million annually.[6] 

That figure covers direct agricultural output only. It excludes the downstream food security costs of increasing dependence on long-distance supply chains.

South Australia offers one counter-model. The 2017 Environment and Food Production Areas legislation permanently protects Adelaide's food bowl fringe from residential development.[14] 

Victoria has proposed stronger farmland protections for Melbourne's green wedges, but legislation remains at the consultation stage.

The Climate Multiplier

The loss of productive farmland to development would represent a significant risk to food security in isolation. Under a warming climate, it represents something more severe. Extreme weather is compounding the food production capacity that remains.

CSIRO research confirms that heat stress reduces vegetable yields and worsens crop quality while disrupting farm labour markets.[10] 

Heatwaves damage crops at critical growth stages and impair pollination of fruit and vegetable species. As Australia warms further, those impacts will intensify across all agricultural regions that remain productive.

Flooding has already delivered severe and quantifiable losses to livestock production. In 2025, more than 100,000 cattle died in outback Queensland during flood events.[10] 

In the summer of 2026, a further 48,000 cattle were reported dead or missing after extreme flooding in north-west Queensland.

Research published in Nature Food shows climate disruptions cascade well beyond the regions directly affected by extreme events.[12] 

Fruit, vegetable and livestock sectors sustain the most severe direct impacts. Losses flow through to transport services, processing industries and retail networks across the broader economy.

Water competition compounds the thermal and flood risks. During the Millennium Drought, Werribee irrigation farmers received just 10 percent of their usual water allocations.[6] 

Southern Australia's projected rainfall decline threatens to replicate those conditions across Melbourne's productive food bowl zones.

The Murray-Darling Basin supports 40 percent of Australian farms and generates $30 billion in food and fibre annually.[11] 

Climate change is intensifying competition for scarcer water resources across the basin. Long-term mismanagement of the basin's environmental health compounds the climate risk to its agricultural productivity.

When a city produces little local food, disruptions to distant supply chains reach households directly. Shorter and more diverse local supply chains provide a proven buffer against that vulnerability.[12] 

Sydney and Melbourne are systematically eliminating that buffer through planning decisions that prioritise housing development over food production.

The Rezoning Windfall

The economic incentive driving farmland conversion operates in a single direction. Rezoning agricultural land for residential development produces land value increases of orders of magnitude. No planning framework currently captures a share of that windfall to compensate for the food production capacity permanently destroyed.

The Blacktown City example makes the arithmetic visible. Rezoning farmland from primary production to high-density residential raises its market value from $12,387 to $10.5 million per hectare.[2] 

That increase of close to 85,000 percent makes agricultural continuation economically irrational for most landholders.

Residential encroachment brings complaints about dust, noise and spray drift that reduce the viability of neighbouring farms.[5] 

The social licence for farming diminishes as residential density increases around remaining agricultural operations. Farmers surrounded by housing face mounting operational costs alongside declining community support.

Land prices near Sydney and Melbourne now reflect residential development potential rather than agricultural value.[6] 

A prospective market gardener competes directly with developers for the same parcels of peri-urban land. The result is a systematic closure of entry pathways into the peri-urban farming sector.

Short-term election cycles compound the structural problem. State governments under housing affordability pressure face an immediate political incentive to approve land releases.[5] 

Food production consequences of those approvals manifest over decades, well beyond the electoral horizon at which decisions are made.

Developer interests are consistently represented in state planning processes. Agricultural interests, particularly those of small-scale market gardeners and poultry producers, carry substantially less political weight.[5] 

That asymmetry has shaped planning outcomes in favour of development across every major Australian city for sixty years.

Farmland converted to housing remains permanently unavailable for agricultural purposes. The infrastructure of food growing, including irrigation systems, soil preparation and cold chain logistics, is dismantled in that process.[3] 

Reconstructing peri-urban food production capacity after residential development is established is effectively impossible at scale.

A Policy Landscape in Pieces

Australia lacks a nationally enforceable framework for protecting peri-urban agricultural land from residential development. Policy authority over land use sits with state governments. Each state has produced a different response to the same structural problem.

South Australia has the most legally robust approach. The 2017 Environment and Food Production Areas legislation permanently protects significant areas of Adelaide's food bowl fringe from urban development.[14] 

No comparable legislative instrument currently operates in New South Wales or Victoria.

New South Wales relies on the Metropolitan Rural Areas concept administered by the Greater Sydney Commission.[5] 

That concept informs strategic planning guidance but carries no force in local planning instruments. Councils that accommodate state housing targets can override it without breaching any legal obligation.

Victoria operates a green wedge system around Melbourne designed to constrain urban expansion into agricultural and environmental land. Recent Victorian government consultation proposed stronger farmland protections and a new agricultural planning zone.[14] 

Existing green wedge controls have proved insufficient to prevent the ongoing loss of productive farmland on Melbourne's fringe.

The Queensland Farmers Federation has called on the Queensland Government to legislate protections for Brisbane's food bowl.[14] 

No such legislation has been enacted. That contrast with South Australia illustrates the absence of any federal coordination mechanism for protecting Australia's urban food bowls.

Australia's National Climate Risk Assessment identifies food systems as a priority risk sector and recommends adaptation investment.[9] 

It identifies risk without establishing enforceable land use standards or obligations on state planning authorities. The assessment documents the problem while leaving the governance framework that generates it unchanged.

Foodprint Melbourne researchers identified the absence of integrated policy solutions as the central obstacle to preserving Australia's urban food bowls.[6] 

The research base is extensive and the policy recommendations are clearly documented. A political decision to prioritise food production alongside housing supply has yet to be made at the scale the evidence demands.

At the Checkout

The consequences of a shrinking food bowl are already visible to Australian consumers. One in three Australian households, representing 3.5 million families, experienced food insecurity in 2025.[13] Fresh food prices have risen as climate events and supply chain disruptions compound the pressures generated by farmland loss.

Farmers for Climate Action documented in 2025 that extreme weather was driving price spikes across fresh food categories.[15] 

Climate-driven disruptions to global wheat production in 2022 pushed prices up by 35 percent. Australian bakers pay global market prices for wheat, so domestic consumers absorbed those increases regardless of local production.[15]

Australian coffee prices have risen by close to 40 percent as climate disruptions to growing regions compound supply chain pressures.[15] 

The connection between climate change and household food costs is now clearly documented. Australians are paying the price of climate disruption directly at the point of sale.

Research published in Nature Food demonstrates that climate disasters generate cascading spillover effects extending well beyond affected food production regions.[12] 

Job losses, income reductions and degraded diet quality flow across regional and national economies. Communities in rural areas sustain the most severe and prolonged impacts.

The Murray-Darling Basin supports 40 percent of Australian farms and generates $30 billion in food and fibre annually.[11] 

Climate change is intensifying competition for its water resources while long-term mismanagement has already degraded its environmental health. Any contraction in basin productivity compounds directly with the loss of urban food bowl capacity.

Cities that retain productive food bowls demonstrate greater capacity to sustain supply during climate disasters affecting distant production regions.[12] 

Local and peri-urban food production provides a documented buffer against national and global supply pressures. Sydney and Melbourne are dismantling that buffer through planning decisions that prioritise housing development over food production.

The food security consequences of those decisions are traceable, documented and worsening. Australia's National Climate Risk Assessment has placed them on the public record.[9] 

The question is whether planning systems will act before the remaining productive farmland is permanently converted to residential use.

The architecture of Australian planning has always resolved tension between housing supply and food production in favour of development. Farmland converted to residential estates cannot be reconstructed once lost. The farms, irrigation networks and market relationships that constitute a functioning peri-urban food system take decades to build.

Australia produces enough food to feed 75 million people and exports 70 percent of its agricultural output. That national abundance masks the vulnerability concentrated in major cities, where residents depend on food transported from distant regions across supply chains that climate change is steadily degrading. One in three Australian households was food-insecure in 2025, a figure that reflects both the cost-of-living crisis and the progressive fragility of the supply systems feeding Australia's urban majority.

The evidence base for protecting Australia's urban food bowls is extensive and publicly available. It sits in CSIRO research, Foodprint Melbourne modelling, Sydney Food Futures projections and the nation's first National Climate Risk Assessment. What is absent is a federal mechanism to translate that evidence into planning obligations that states are required to meet.

A rezoning decision made today by a state planning minister is also a food security decision for the next generation. Australian governance is structured in a way that renders those two decisions invisible to each other. That invisibility has costs that compound with every additional hectare of productive farmland converted to residential development.

References

1. Bureau of Meteorology and CSIRO, State of the Climate 2022 (Commonwealth of Australia, 2022). Documents Australia's mean surface air temperature increase of 1.47°C since 1910, with warming accelerating from the mid-twentieth century, and establishes the trajectory of intensifying heat extremes affecting agricultural productivity.

2. Western Sydney Regional Organisation of Councils (WSROC), Population Growth and Development Eating Sydney's Food Belt (WSROC, 2022). Reports the contraction of peri-urban agricultural land in Greater Sydney from 292,644 to 99,519 hectares, documents the Blacktown City land value uplift from rezoning, and analyses the structural conflict between housing growth targets and food bowl preservation.

3. Zeunert, J. and Gowers, J., Sydney Once Produced Its Own Food, UNSW Newsroom (3 September 2025). Documents the historical diversity of Sydney's food production landscape from 1788 to 2021 and analyses how urban development has progressively dismantled the city's local food economy.

4. Sydney Food Futures, Challenges for Peri-Urban Farming (Institute for Sustainable Futures, UTS). Sets out the planning history of Sydney's metropolitan growth strategies, documents the proportion of vegetable-growing enterprises situated within designated growth centres, and projects the loss of 90 percent of locally produced vegetables if planned development proceeds.

5. Lawton, C. and Morrison, T.H., 'The loss of peri-urban agricultural land and the state-local tensions in managing its demise: The case of Greater Western Sydney, Australia', Land Use Policy, 2022, 119. Analyses the intergovernmental conflict between NSW state growth targets and local council agricultural land protection policies, the advisory status of Metropolitan Rural Areas, and the structural political economy driving farmland conversion.

6. Carey, R. and Sheridan, J., Roadmap for a Resilient and Sustainable Melbourne Foodbowl (Foodprint Melbourne, University of Melbourne, 2019). Presents Deloitte modelling projecting agricultural output losses of $32 to $111 million annually from continued urban sprawl, documents the 41 percent contribution of Melbourne's fringe farmland to fresh food supply, and includes Millennium Drought water allocation data for Werribee irrigators.

7. FoodSecure Melbourne, Many Challenges, One Solution (FoodSecure Melbourne, 2024). Projects that by 2050, Melbourne will produce little more than 15 percent of its food needs locally as urban sprawl displaces fringe farmland, and outlines the case for recycled water infrastructure to support remaining agricultural producers.

8. Foreground, 'Planning Our Food Future' (Foreground, 2020). Documents Werribee South's contribution of 85 percent of Victoria's cauliflower production, the $95 million Wyndham Vale farm sale, and the developer pressure transforming Melbourne's inner food bowl agricultural zones into residential estates.

9. Australian Climate Service, National Climate Risk Assessment (Commonwealth of Australia, 2025). Australia's first national climate risk assessment, identifying food systems as a priority risk sector across eight key systems and eleven regions, with agricultural vulnerability to drought, flood, heat and supply chain disruption extensively documented.

10. Carey, R. et al., 'Overheated Cows, Flooded Highways, and Now a Fuel Crisis: Why Australia's Food System Is in Big Trouble', University of Technology Sydney (21 April 2026). Summarises CSIRO findings on heat stress reducing vegetable yields and worsening crop quality, and documents the 2025 and 2026 Queensland flooding events that killed more than 148,000 cattle across two consecutive seasons.

11. SBS News, 'Already Under Pressure, Australia's Food System Could Now Be in Big Trouble' (SBS News, 21 April 2026). Documents the Murray-Darling Basin's support for 40 percent of Australian farms and $30 billion in annual food and fibre output, Sydney's projected fall to 6 percent food self-sufficiency by 2031, and the 90 percent decline in local vegetable and egg supply under approved development scenarios.

12. Lenzen, M. et al., 'Impacts of Climate Change and Extreme Weather on Food Supply Chains Cascade across Sectors and Regions in Australia', Nature Food, 2022, 3, 605-613. Applies integrated modelling to Australian food supply chains, demonstrating that climate disasters generate cascading spillover effects across fruit, vegetable and livestock sectors with downstream impacts on transport services, employment and diet quality.

13. Foodbank Australia, Foodbank Hunger Report 2025 (Foodbank Australia, November 2025). Documents persistent food insecurity across one in three Australian households, or 3.5 million families, in 2025, with nearly one in two rental households reporting food insecurity and severe food insecurity prevalent across single-parent and disability households.

14. Carey, R., 'To Protect Fresh Food Supplies, Here Are the Key Steps to Secure City Foodbowls', The Conversation (2019, updated 2026). Outlines South Australia's 2017 legislated Environment and Food Production Areas as the strongest Australian model for peri-urban farmland protection, contrasts it with Victoria's proposed green wedge reforms and the Queensland Farmers Federation's calls for comparable legislation.

15. Farmers for Climate Action, 'Climate Change Costs at the Checkout, and Australians Know It' (Farmers for Climate Action, 14 May 2025). Documents climate-driven fresh food price increases across Australia, including a near-40 percent rise in coffee prices and a 35 percent spike in global wheat prices, and tracks consumer awareness of the link between extreme weather events and grocery costs.

Back to top ↑

17/06/2026

Exposed: How Climate Risk in Australia Bypasses Community Sport - Lethal Heating Editor BDA




Key Points
  • Australia has warmed by 1.47°C since 1910, with extreme heat events becoming more frequent and severe, directly threatening participation in outdoor sport at every level.[1]
  • Tennis Australia and the AFL operate mandatory climate-risk protocols for elite competitions, but no equivalent enforceable standard covers community sport nationally.[3][4]
  • During the 2019–20 Black Summer, bushfire smoke drove Sydney’s air quality to hazardous levels during an international cricket Test, leaving unresolved questions about the duty of care owed to players who competed in those conditions.[6]
  • Children generate more metabolic heat per kilogram of body mass than adults and are less reliable at detecting early heat stress, placing them at the highest physiological risk during outdoor sport in extreme conditions.[8]
  • The 2022 south-east Queensland floods caused extensive damage to sporting infrastructure from Suncorp Stadium to community clubs across the river catchments, exposing critical gaps in insurance cover for volunteer-run organisations.[10]
  • CSIRO projections show that Australian alpine snow cover will decline significantly under all emissions scenarios, placing the domestic winter sports industry and elite training pathways under mounting long-term pressure.[12]

Australia's elite sporting bodies have built elaborate protocols for heat and air quality. On the community ovals, courts, and pitches where most Australians play, those protections largely stop at the gate.

The gap reflects the structure of Australian sporting governance. Regulatory authority concentrates at the elite level. Community sport operates on advisory frameworks that individual clubs, local councils, and volunteer associations can accept or disregard. 

As climate extremes intensify, that structure is producing a two-tier system of protection: careful and enforceable for professional athletes, advisory and patchwork for the millions of Australians who play sport each weekend.[2]

Australia has already warmed by 1.47 degrees Celsius since 1910, with the rate of increase accelerating since mid-century.[1]

Bureau of Meteorology records show extreme heat events are becoming more frequent and more severe across the continent. 

For outdoor sport, the consequences are direct and physiological: core body temperature rises faster under sustained aerobic load, cognitive function degrades under heat stress, and the risk of heat exhaustion climbs with each additional hour of exposure. 

Professional athletes train in facilities designed for climate adaptation. Community athletes compete on suburban and rural grounds where shade is scarce, cooling infrastructure is absent, and the nearest medical resource may be a volunteer with a first-aid certificate.

An Elaborate Architecture

Tennis Australia operates the most thoroughly documented extreme heat response framework in Australian sport. 

The policy, significantly revised after the 2014 Australian Open when temperatures at Melbourne Park reached 44 degrees and multiple players sought medical attention or withdrew from matches, uses a composite heat stress index drawing on wet bulb globe temperature, humidity, solar radiation, and wind speed as its primary indicators.[3]

When conditions at Melbourne Park reach specified thresholds, officials can close stadium roofs, restrict outdoor warm-ups, and suspend play on exposed courts. Decision-making authority rests with designated officials operating from calibrated monitoring data. Thresholds are published in advance. 

The system is imperfect, contested in its application, but documented and formally enforceable.

The AFL operates comparable protocols for elite fixtures, allowing match officials to pause or reschedule games when conditions present acute risk to player welfare.[4]

Both systems apply primarily to competitions the relevant bodies control directly. Below that level, the architecture dissolves.

Advisory, Not Mandatory

Sport Australia, the federal government’s peak sporting body, publishes hot weather guidelines for community sport. The guidelines recommend suspending activity when wet bulb globe temperature exceeds 28 degrees for high-intensity sport involving children, and 32 degrees for adult participation.[5]

Those thresholds align with international sports medicine consensus. They carry no legal force.

State sporting associations and local councils may adopt, adapt, or ignore the Sport Australia guidelines. The result across Australia is a fragmented collection of local policies, some rigorous, most informal, applied inconsistently by volunteer coaches and administrators who typically hold no formal training in heat physiology. 

When a junior football coach on a 41-degree February afternoon decides whether to cancel training, that decision occurs without legal compulsion, without calibrated monitoring equipment, and frequently without access to real-time wet bulb globe temperature data specific to the playing location.

Urban heat island effects in outer suburban areas, where community sport is densely concentrated, can push conditions several degrees above official Bureau of Meteorology readings taken at metropolitan weather stations. A coach consulting a weather app in western Sydney or Ipswich may be making a life-safety decision based on figures that understate conditions on the ground by four or five degrees.

Sport Australia holds no mechanism to enforce compliance with its guidelines. The legal question of whether sporting organisations can be held liable for harm to participants during foreseeable extreme weather events remains largely untested in Australian courts. 

As climate risk evidence accumulates, legal scholars have observed that the duty of care owed to sporting participants, particularly children, is likely to become substantially more defined.

When the Sky Turned Brown

The limits of sport’s climate governance became visible in January 2020, when smoke from the catastrophic Black Summer bushfires blanketed large parts of eastern Australia. 

Air quality in Sydney, Canberra, and Melbourne reached levels that public health authorities classified as hazardous for sensitive groups, with residents across those cities advised to minimise physical exertion and remain indoors where possible.[6]

The sporting response was inconsistent. A Women’s Big Bash League match in Canberra was abandoned when conditions became untenable. At the SCG, where Australia faced New Zealand in the third Test from January 3, 2020, play continued. Players warmed up on the outfield wearing face masks as smoke compressed the horizon and particulate readings climbed well above standard hazardous thresholds. Cricket Australia’s medical team monitored air quality index data in real time and the match proceeded.

The decision drew pointed and sustained criticism. Sports medicine professionals noted that athletes under aerobic competition load inhale substantially greater volumes of fine particulate matter than sedentary bystanders, with exercise-induced increases in ventilation rate multiplying the effective dose of pollutants absorbed into the airways.[7]

Cricket Australia subsequently developed more formal air quality protocols for its elite competitions, establishing threshold values and decision-making procedures that had not existed during the Black Summer. The review applied to events Cricket Australia controls directly. Community cricket clubs across New South Wales and Queensland, which had continued fielding matches through the same smoke events without any comparable policy framework, received no equivalent guidance update.

The Youngest Players

Children face a specific and underappreciated physiological risk in extreme heat. Sports medicine research has established that children generate more metabolic heat per kilogram of body mass than adults, dissipate that heat less efficiently through sweating, and are significantly less reliable at recognising and reporting the early symptoms of heat stress before they become serious.[8]

Children also acclimatise to heat more slowly than adults, requiring extended adjustment periods before sustained aerobic exercise in elevated temperatures becomes physiologically safe. Australian summer sport schedules are structured around school holiday availability rather than thermal safety. Saturday morning junior cricket and weekend football competitions take place across peak heat hours without any mandatory temperature ceiling that overrides local club decisions.

The Australian Institute of Sport has published guidance on heat acclimatisation that specifically identifies children’s elevated physiological vulnerability and recommends heightened caution during heat events involving young participants.[9]

That guidance sits in the same advisory category as the Sport Australia hot weather guidelines: carefully reasoned, well evidenced, and carrying no legal weight whatsoever.

The Cost Below the Surface

Climate risk in Australian sport extends well beyond player safety to the physical infrastructure on which sport depends. When south-east Queensland experienced catastrophic flooding in February and March 2022, the consequences for sporting infrastructure were extensive and largely invisible to national attention.

Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane required significant remediation work after surrounding precincts were inundated by floodwaters during the disaster event.[10]

Community clubs across the Ipswich and Brisbane River catchments lost playing surfaces, equipment stores, and change room facilities. Many carried insurance cover that proved inadequate for the scale of damage sustained. Those that attempted to renew their policies found insurers reassessing terms in light of demonstrated flood exposure. 

The Insurance Council of Australia has documented rising premiums and shrinking cover availability for community assets in flood and fire-exposed zones, a pattern that mirrors the residential insurance crisis accelerating in climate-vulnerable regions across the country.[11]

Regional clubs confront additional pressures that urban counterparts generally avoid. Prolonged drought conditions in inland eastern Australia have hardened playing surfaces on community cricket and football ovals to levels that exceed recognised safety benchmarks for player impact. Ground hardness above established thresholds increases the risk of impact injuries for fielders and can render pitch preparation unsafe. 

Water restrictions during drought periods make turf irrigation prohibitively expensive for volunteer-run clubs operating on annual budgets measured in tens of thousands of dollars.

The Retreat of Winter

Australia’s alpine region supports a winter sports industry centred on resorts at Mount Buller, Perisher, Thredbo, and Falls Creek. That industry, and the domestic training pathways it provides for Australian snow-sport athletes competing internationally, depends on natural snowfall that climate projections indicate is becoming progressively less reliable.

CSIRO research projects that alpine snow cover in Australia will decline under all emissions scenarios, with the largest reductions at lower elevations and during spring, shortening viable snow seasons from both ends of the calendar.[12]

Australian snow-sport athletes have in recent seasons increasingly sought training time at facilities in Europe, Japan, and North America to compensate for shorter and less predictable domestic conditions. The long-term question of national training infrastructure in an era of retreating snowpack has received little formal attention from winter sport governing bodies or federal sports policy. 

No published adaptation framework addresses the possibility that domestic snow seasons may eventually prove insufficient to support elite athletic development.

Commitments Without Compliance

Australia’s major sporting organisations have made visible commitments to reducing their own environmental footprints. Cricket Australia has published sustainability targets and committed to reaching net-zero emissions across its operations by 2030.[13]

The AFL has invested in renewable energy infrastructure at elite venues. Those commitments are substantive within the emissions reduction context, but they address sport’s contribution to climate change rather than its governance response to climate risk. The two objectives are distinct, and governing bodies have advanced the former considerably faster than the latter.

The legal terrain around duty of care in community sport is beginning to sharpen. Heat injuries in sport are not hypothetical. They are recorded, published in peer-reviewed literature, and directly attributable to participation in conditions that exceeded safe physiological thresholds.[14]

Courts have increasingly recognised that organisations exercising duty of care over participants cannot rely on informal frameworks when documented risks are foreseeable. Climate risk is now extensively and publicly documented. 

A serious heat injury to a child at a community sporting event, occurring in conditions that governing bodies had identified as dangerous in their own advisory guidelines while taking no steps to enforce compliance, would present a clear and uncomfortable liability question to any court examining the governance structure that permitted it.

Two Systems, One Climate

The architecture of Australian sporting governance has always concentrated resources at the elite end. Funding, regulatory attention, and policy development follow broadcast rights and media prominence. Climate governance has replicated that pattern with precision.

A professional tennis player at Melbourne Park competes under retractable roofs, monitored by a dedicated medical team, within a documented and enforceable heat policy framework. An eleven-year-old playing Saturday morning cricket in Penrith has none of those protections. The physiological science that describes the risks to both players is identical. The institutional response is not.

None of the governing bodies involved is acting recklessly. The AFL’s heat provisions for elite competition represent genuine investment in player welfare. Tennis Australia’s extreme heat framework embodies years of careful refinement. But investment in elite climate governance, unaccompanied by enforceable standards at the community level, produces a system that protects sport’s most visible assets while leaving its broadest participation base exposed to risks that are certain to intensify.

The summers getting longer do not distinguish between a Test match at the MCG and a junior football final in Wagga Wagga. 

The question is whether Australia’s sporting institutions will wait for serious harm, or a successful negligence claim, before building the protections that evidence has long recommended.

References

1. Bureau of Meteorology and CSIRO, State of the Climate 2022 (Commonwealth of Australia, 2022). Australia's mean surface air temperature has increased by 1.47°C since national records began in 1910, with warming accelerating since the middle of the twentieth century.

2. Sport Australia, AusPlay Survey 2022–23 (Australian Sports Commission, 2023). National survey of sport and physical activity participation across Australia, tracking community engagement across codes and age groups.

3. Tennis Australia, Australian Open Extreme Heat Policy (Tennis Australia, updated 2019). Sets out composite heat stress index thresholds, monitoring protocols, and decision-making authority for conditions at Melbourne Park.

4. Australian Football League, AFL Extreme Weather Policy (AFL, 2021). Governing document for weather-related match suspensions and player welfare management at elite AFL fixtures.

5. Sport Australia, Hot Weather Guidelines for Community Sport (Australian Sports Commission, updated 2020). Advisory framework setting out recommended activity modification and suspension thresholds across wet bulb globe temperature bands for participant welfare in community sport.

6. Royal Commission into National Natural Disaster Arrangements, Report (Commonwealth of Australia, 2020). Documents the scale and severity of the 2019–20 Black Summer bushfire season, including air quality impacts across major population centres and their implications for public activity.

7. Department of Health and Aged Care (Australia), Fact Sheet: Bushfire Smoke and Your Health (Commonwealth of Australia, 2020). Notes that strenuous physical exertion in smoky conditions substantially increases inhalation of fine particulate matter, with ventilation rates during exercise multiplying effective pollutant dose.

8. Rowland, T.W., 'Thermoregulation during exercise in the heat in children: old concepts revisited', Journal of Applied Physiology, 2008, 105(2), 718–724. Established that children produce more metabolic heat per unit body mass than adults, acclimatise more slowly, and are less reliable at self-reporting early symptoms of heat stress.

9. Australian Institute of Sport, Heat Stress Management Guidelines (AIS, 2020). Includes specific provisions addressing the elevated physiological vulnerability of children and adolescents to heat stress during sporting activity.

10. Queensland Reconstruction Authority, 2022 South East Queensland Rainfall and Flooding: Community Recovery Report (Queensland Government, 2022). Documents infrastructure damage across the region during the February–March 2022 flood event, including impacts on recreational and elite sporting facilities.

11. Insurance Council of Australia, Uninsurable Nation: Australia's Most Climate-Vulnerable Places (ICA, 2022). Documents rising premiums and declining cover availability for properties and community assets in climate-exposed zones, including analysis of community infrastructure in flood and fire-risk areas.

12. Bhend, J., Bathols, J. and Hennessy, K., Climate Change Impacts on Snow in Victoria (CSIRO, 2012). Projects significant declines in alpine snow cover under moderate and high emissions scenarios, with the largest reductions at lower elevations and during spring months.

13. Cricket Australia, Sustainability Strategy and Report 2022–23 (Cricket Australia, 2023). Sets out Cricket Australia's commitment to reaching net-zero emissions across operations by 2030, alongside interim targets for energy, travel, and procurement.

14. Casa, D.J. et al., 'Exertional heat stroke: new concepts regarding cause and care', Current Sports Medicine Reports, 2012, 11(3), 115–123. Comprehensive review of exertional heat illness in competitive sport, documenting recorded fatalities and serious injury events attributable to participation in conditions exceeding safe physiological thresholds.

Back to top ↑

16/06/2026

Winter’s Here, The Snowfields Are Open, But There’s No Snow - Gregory Andrews

Winter has arrived in Australia. At least, according to the calendar. The ski fields are open. The chairlifts are running. But even with the snow machines, there’s little or no snow to be seen. Warmth and rain have melted what little snow did fall, and the ski runs are mostly grass and mud.

At the same time, much of Australia has experienced its warmest start to winter on record. Sydney is on track for its warmest start to winter since records began in 1859. Melbourne and Canberra are experiencing their warmest starts to winter in decades. 

Across the country, temperatures are sitting well above average for this time of year. Sydney, Melbourne, Hobart and Canberra are all forecast to be at least 5 degrees warmer than average this week. In my garden, some of the spring flowers have already started blooming.

Globally, the picture is even more alarming. Climate scientist James Hansen and his colleagues argue that 2026 may be the hottest year ever recorded. Other researchers are more cautious, but there’s broad agreement on the underlying trend: global warming is not just occuring, its accelerating.

For years, climate change was something that happened elsewhere or in the future. It was melting glaciers in Greenland, droughts in Africa, coral bleaching on distant reefs, or record heatwaves in places we had never visited.

Now it’s here. It’s here when winter feels like early autumn. It’s here when our snow season arrives without snow. It’s here when insurance premiums rise, when food prices increase after climate-fuelled disasters, when extreme weather damages homes and infrastructure, and when ecosystems that have evolved over thousands of years struggle to adapt to changes occurring within decades.

Australia’s snowfields are open but there’s no snow. Photo: ABC News.
Perhaps most concerning is how normal this is becoming. Humans are remarkably adaptable. We quickly become accustomed to new realities. 

Last year’s unprecedented temperatures become this year’s baseline. What would once have been front-page news becomes just another weather report at the bottom of a long list of other news.

This phenomenon has a name: shifting baseline syndrome. Each generation accepts the conditions it grows up with as normal, even when those conditions would have shocked previous generations. The danger isn’t simply that the climate is changing. The danger it’s that we stop noticing.

And while all this is happening, powerful interests would very much like us to be distracted.

They want us arguing about culture wars, symbolic controversies, and manufactured outrage. They want us fighting each other over identity, language, and social media scandals while the atmosphere continues to accumulate greenhouse gases and the planet continues to warm.

That’s not an accident. The fossil fuel fascists like culture wars because they divide communities, attract attention, generate clicks, and consume public debate. Every hour spent arguing over a manufactured controversy is an hour not spent discussing climate risk, energy transition, biodiversity loss, housing resilience, insurance affordability, or the long-term future of our children.

We mustn’t fall for it. Climate change doesn’t care how we vote. It doesn’t care whether we’re progressive or conservative, urban or regional, wealthy or struggling. Physics doesn’t negotiate. The atmosphere doesn’t respond to political spin. The snow doesn’t fall because a politician says everything’s OK and climate change is fake.

The challenge before us should not be ideological. The snowfields are open. But the snow is gone. If that doesn’t tell us something important about the future we are creating, I’m not sure what will.

Before getting despondent, check out my recent post on things you can do now to maintain active hope and help secure as safe planet. 

Gregory Andrews Climate Change Articles

15/06/2026

Worried About Climate Collapse? Here’s Ten Things You Can Actually Do - Gregory Andrews

 Lyrebird Dreaming - Gregory Andrews


Author

Gregory Andrews is:

Someone asked a really good question on one of my posts recently. They said they loved the climate content but wondered what they can actually do. 

And honestly, that question matters. Because one of the worst things about climate collapse is the feeling of powerlessness. 

We watch governments approve new coal and gas. We watch billionaires and huge companies greenwash their way through everything. We watch floods, fires, heatwaves, bleaching, crop failures and insurance crises roll through communities - and then we’re told to recycle more.

Yes, personal choices matter. But they’re not enough. The climate crisis wasn’t created by ordinary people forgetting their reusable cups and shopping bags. It was created by political choices, corporate power, fossil fuel lobbying, and decades of delay. 

So the answer has to be bigger than individual guilt. It has to be about active hope. Not passive optimism. That means choosing to act because the future is still being shaped, and because power shifts when people organise.

Here’s my top ten things you can do.

1. Stop trying to do everything

This might sound strange as number one. But it matters. Climate collapse is overwhelming because it touches everything: energy, transport, housing, food, forests, oceans, politics, money, war, migration, health and justice. Nobody can work on all of that at once. So choose your lane.

Maybe your thing is political campaigning. Maybe it’s protecting a local forest. Maybe it’s helping renters electrify. Maybe it’s First Nations justice. Maybe it’s calling out fossil fuel fascism. Maybe it’s making art, writing posts, showing up at meetings, or helping good people get elected. 

You don’t have to do everything. But you do need to do something.

2. Join with other people

Individual action matters most when it becomes collective action. One person writing to a politician can be ignored. A thousand people writing to a politician becomes a problem. One person changing banks is symbolic. Thousands of people shifting their money away from fossil fuel finance becomes pressure. One person talking about climate might feel isolated. A community talking about climate can change an election.

This is why movements matter. Find a local climate group, a community campaign, a Landcare group, a union campaign, a school group, a renewable energy group, or a community independent campaign. 

Climate action becomes less scary when you stop carrying it alone.

3. Get political - properly political

The climate crisis isn’t just an environmental issue. It’s a political issue. That means voting matters. But voting isn’t the only thing that matters. Join campaigns. Door knock. Hand out how-to-vote cards. Scrutineer. Host kitchen table conversations. Ask candidates direct questions. Support people who are serious about climate, integrity and community.

I felt genuinely empowered working with my community to help get David Pocock elected in 2022. It reminded me that politics doesn’t have to be something done to us by party machines. It can be something we do together. And we almost got there with Jessie Price in 2025. Next time, for sure. The community independents movement matters because it shows that ordinary people can organise, challenge the major parties, and change the national conversation. 

That’s climate action.

4. Hold politicians accountable between elections

Politicians don’t only need to hear from us every three years. They need to hear from us all the time. Email them. Call their offices. Ask for meetings. Turn up to town halls. Respond to consultations. Make submissions. Ask simple, direct questions:

  • Will you support no new coal and gas?
  • Will you support a climate trigger in national environment law?
  • Will you support ending fossil fuel subsidies?
  • Will you support protecting forests?
  • Will you support electrifying homes, transport and industry?

Don’t let them hide behind vague language about “balance”, “transition” or “all of the above”. Ask what they’re actually doing.

5. Follow the money

The fossil fuel industry does’t just dig up coal and gas. It buys influence. It sponsors events. It funds think tanks. It donates to political parties. It advertises during sporting events. It puts its logo on community programs. It hires lobbyists. It uses greenwashing to buy social licence. So follow the money.

Ask who’s funding the campaign. Ask which companies are sponsoring the conference. Ask whether your superannuation is invested in fossil fuels. Ask whether your bank is lending to new coal and gas projects. Ask whether your university, sporting club, festival, arts organisation or charity is taking fossil fuel money. 

The social licence of fossil fuel companies is not inevitable. It can be withdrawn.

6. Call out fossil fuel fascism and corporate greenwashing

Big fossil fuel companies aren’t just selling coal and gas. They’re defending a dying business model with political donations, lobbying, disinformation, culture wars, attacks on protest rights, and greenwashing. That’s why I call it fossil fuel fascism. It’s what happens when a powerful industry knows its product is destabilising the climate, but instead of changing course, it tries to bend democracy around its own survival.

So call it out. When a gas company says gas is “clean”, ask compared to what. When a coal company sponsors a community event, ask what social licence it’s trying to buy. When politicians repeat fossil fuel talking points, ask who benefits. When corporations talk about “net zero”, ask whether they’re still expanding coal and gas. When media outlets run climate denial or delay narratives, ask who’s funding the story.

Greenwashing works when nobody challenges it. Fossil fuel power works when people are too polite, too tired, or too intimidated to name it. Name it. Because democracy can’t survive if governments keep serving fossil fuel companies while communities pay the price.

7. Use your workplace, profession and networks

Most of us have more influence than we realise. You may not feel powerful as one person. But you may be part of a workplace, board, school, university, union, church, sporting club, professional association, arts organisation or community group.

Ask what your organisation is doing on climate. Does it have a climate policy? Is it electrifying? Is it divesting? Is it reducing travel emissions? Is it still banking with fossil fuel lenders? Is it purchasing renewable energy? Is it using its public voice? 

Every institution is part of the climate system now. Push yours.

8. Protect nature where you live

Climate and nature aren’t separate crises. Protecting forests, wetlands, grasslands, rivers, reefs, soils and threatened species is climate action. So is restoring habitat, removing invasive species, supporting cultural burning, protecting urban trees, and defending Country from destructive development.

This work is local, practical and powerful. It also helps to counter despair. Because when you plant something, restore something, defend something, or care for Country, you’re not just opposing destruction. 

You are participating in repair. That matters.

9. Talk about climate in human terms

Facts matter. Science matters. Data matters. UN treaty obligations matter. But people are moved by stories. So talk about climate as a cost-of-living issue. Talk about insurance. Talk about rent and food prices. Talk about asthma. Talk about heat stress. Talk about children. Talk about older people. Talk about farmers, our Pacific neighbours and First Nations communities watching Country change before their eyes.

The climate crisis isn’t a future abstraction. It’s already here. And it’s already personal.

The more we make that visible, the harder it becomes for politicians and corporations to pretend delay is harmless.

10. Practise active hope

Hope isn’t the belief that everything will be fine. Hope is the decision to act anyway.

Some days, that might mean joining a campaign. Some days, it might mean making a phone call. Some days, it might mean donating $20. Some days, it might mean sharing a post. Some days, it might mean resting so you can keep going.

Climate action isn’t about purity. It is about persistence. The fossil fuel industry and fascists want us isolated, exhausted, cynical and ashamed. So refuse that.

Find your people. Choose your lane. Build power. Hold politicians accountable. Hold companies accountable. Protect what you love. And keep going. Because the future isn’t decided yet. And ordinary people like us, organised together, have changed history before.

Gregory Andrews Climate Change Articles

Lethal Heating is a citizens' initiative