20/04/2026

The Science Is In: Global Warming Is Accelerating - Gregory Andrews

Author

Gregory Andrews is:

Something deeply worrying just appeared in the scientific literature. 

A new paper by respected climate scientist Stefan Rahmstorf and colleagues shows that the rate of global warming has significantly accelerated since 2015. 

After filtering out natural variability from things like El Niño, volcanic eruptions and solar cycles, Rahmstorf and his colleagues found a statistically significant acceleration in warming with over 98 percent certainty.

Put simply: the planet is now heating faster than it was.

The Earth warmed at roughly 0.2°C per decade from 1970 and 2015. But over the past decade the rate has jumped to 0.35°C per decade. This isn’t a small change in the margins of the data. It is a profound shift in the trajectory of our climate system.

Scientists have long warned that warming will accelerate if emissions don’t come down and as feedback loops kick in. This new analysis shows that acceleration is now occurring. The world isn’t just warming. It’s warming faster.

What This Means for the Future

Climate scientist Kevin Anderson has spent years warning that policymakers are dangerously underestimating the consequences of continued fossil-fuel emissions. He argues that if the world continues on its current trajectory we could see 4°C of warming by 2100

And he’s been blunt about what that means. The impacts on food systems, water supplies, ecosystems and sea levels will combine into what he describes as “systemic collapse of economies within a collapsing climate system.”

These aren’t fringe views. Anderson is a professor of energy and climate change at the University of Manchester and a former director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, one of the world’s leading climate institutes.

His point is not that 4°C is inevitable. His warning is that our current policies are consistent with that level of warming unless we radically change course. And the new evidence that warming itself is accelerating makes his warning even harder to ignore.

The Political Silence

Yet if you listen to political debate in Australia or many other countries right now, you would barely know any of this. Wars dominate the headlines. Security, immigration and ‘cost of living’ propaganda are at the forefront.

While culture wars dominate, the single largest threat to the long-term stability of human civilisation receives, at best, sporadic coverage between other crises.

This is politically convenient. Wars rally national unity and justify massive spending. They dominate media cycles. They allow governments to posture as decisive and patriotic.

Climate change, by contrast, demands something far more difficult: confronting powerful fossil-fuel industries, redesigning energy systems, and asking wealthy societies to change how they consume energy. So the climate crisis continues in the background while politics focuses elsewhere.

But the atmosphere doesn’t pause while we’re distracted. Carbon dioxide concentrations continue to rise, even more so due to the wars themselves. Because when bombs and missiles fall, the environment pays a heavy price. The oceans continue to absorb heat. The planet continues to warm.

The Window’s Still Open – Just

The most important point in the new research is urgency. Warming is driven overwhelmingly by human emissions. That means the trajectory can still change if emissions fall rapidly.

Physics doesn’t negotiate with politics or respond to the spin and talking points we hear from our Government, but it does respond to action. Cut fossil-fuel emissions to zero and warming eventually stops. Fail to do so and the climate system continues moving towards levels that human civilisation has never experienced.

That’s the choice before us. The science is clearer. The warnings are louder. The key question is whether we will listen. 

References 

19/04/2026

Australia’s Silent Collapse: How Climate Change Is Rewriting the Fate of 2,175 Species - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Australia’s biodiversity crisis is accelerating
faster than policy and science can respond
Key Points
  • Threatened species increased 54% since 2000 1
  • Climate change now affects nine in ten new listings 2
  • Black Summer fires still driving ecological decline 3
  • Reptiles and frogs show steepest population collapses 4
  • Policy frameworks remain reactive rather than preventative 5
  • Urban growth and climate pressures converge in hotspots 6


Australia’s environmental decline is no longer gradual or abstract but measurable in stark numbers, with 2,175 species now listed as threatened under federal law, representing a 54 percent increase since 2000.[1]

This surge reflects not a single cause but a convergence of pressures, where climate change intensifies long-standing threats such as land clearing, invasive species and altered fire regimes.

Drivers of Acceleration

Scientific assessments increasingly show that biodiversity loss in Australia is driven by interacting forces rather than isolated threats, with climate change acting as a multiplier of existing pressures.[2]

Land clearing continues to fragment habitats, particularly in eastern Australia, reducing resilience and isolating populations that cannot adapt to rapid environmental change.

Invasive species, including feral cats and foxes, exploit weakened ecosystems, increasing predation on native fauna already stressed by habitat loss and temperature extremes.

Fire regimes have also shifted dramatically, with more frequent and intense bushfires altering ecological baselines and preventing recovery cycles that species once depended on.

Together, these drivers form a feedback loop, where each pressure amplifies the others, accelerating the rate of species decline beyond historical patterns.

Climate Change as a Dominant Threat

Climate change has emerged as the defining force behind new species listings, now affecting nine out of ten newly threatened species.[2]

This shift challenges traditional conservation approaches that focus on individual species recovery plans, which are often too slow and narrowly targeted for systemic environmental change.

Heatwaves, shifting rainfall patterns and rising sea levels are altering entire ecosystems, making previous conservation baselines obsolete.

In northern Australia, saltwater intrusion into freshwater wetlands is reshaping habitats, while alpine species face shrinking ranges as temperatures rise.

Experts argue that conservation policy must move towards landscape-scale adaptation strategies, integrating climate projections into all biodiversity planning.

Post–Black Summer Legacy

The 2019–20 Black Summer bushfires remain a defining ecological event, with impacts still unfolding years later.[3]

More than half of new species listings since the fires are linked to habitat destruction and long-term ecological disruption caused during that period.

Entire ecosystems were burned at unprecedented intensity, leaving insufficient refuges for species to survive and recover.

The fires exposed lag effects in ecological collapse, where species may appear stable immediately after disturbance but decline sharply over subsequent years.

This delayed impact complicates conservation efforts, as policy responses often lag behind the true scale of ecological damage.

Population Decline vs Listing Growth

While the number of threatened species continues to rise, population trends reveal an even more troubling pattern, with average declines of around 59 percent since 2000.[1]

This divergence suggests that species are being listed only after significant population losses have already occurred.

In practice, this indicates a reactive system where conservation measures are triggered too late to prevent severe declines.

Legal protections often come after ecosystems have crossed critical thresholds, reducing the likelihood of recovery.

Policy reform efforts increasingly focus on early intervention and proactive habitat protection, though implementation remains uneven.

Taxonomic Disparities

Reptiles and amphibians have experienced the steepest declines, with average reductions of 88 percent and 67 percent respectively.[4]

These groups are particularly vulnerable to temperature changes and moisture loss, making them early indicators of climate stress.

Unlike birds and mammals, reptiles and amphibians receive less conservation funding and monitoring attention, creating gaps in data and response capacity.

Diseases such as chytrid fungus in frogs further compound climate impacts, accelerating population collapses.

This imbalance highlights the need for more equitable allocation of conservation resources across taxonomic groups.

Escalation in Threat Categories

The proportion of species classified as critically endangered has risen sharply from around 1 percent in 2000 to approximately 20 percent in 2025.[7]

This shift reflects both worsening environmental conditions and improved detection of at-risk species.

However, it also suggests delays in intervention, where species are not protected until they reach critical levels of decline.

Such escalation increases the cost and complexity of recovery efforts, often requiring intensive management strategies.

Preventative conservation remains significantly more effective than late-stage intervention, yet is underutilised.

Regional Hotspots

Regions such as the Sydney Basin consistently record high numbers of new threatened species listings, reflecting the intersection of urban expansion and environmental stress.[6]

Rapid population growth has driven habitat fragmentation, while climate change exacerbates heat and water stress in already degraded landscapes.

Urban environments also introduce additional pressures, including pollution and invasive species.

These hotspots illustrate how human development patterns intensify ecological vulnerability.

Balancing urban growth with biodiversity protection remains one of Australia’s most complex policy challenges.

Marine Ecosystem Collapse Signals

Marine ecosystems are showing equally alarming signs of stress, particularly through record marine heatwaves and repeated coral bleaching events.[8]

The Great Barrier Reef has experienced multiple mass bleaching events in recent years, reducing coral cover and biodiversity.

Ocean warming disrupts food chains and species distribution, with cascading effects across marine ecosystems.

Compared to terrestrial systems, marine environments are often less visible to policymakers, despite their economic and ecological importance.

The report underscores the urgency of integrating ocean conservation into broader climate and biodiversity strategies.

Effectiveness of Environmental Policy

Despite improvements in some environmental indicators such as rainfall and vegetation growth, biodiversity continues to decline.[5]

This disconnect highlights limitations in existing frameworks, including the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999.

Critics argue that the legislation is reactive and fragmented, focusing on individual species rather than ecosystem resilience.

Enforcement challenges and competing economic priorities further weaken its effectiveness.

Recent policy reviews call for a more integrated approach that aligns biodiversity protection with climate adaptation and land use planning.

Future Trajectories and Tipping Points

The continued rise in threatened species raises the possibility of systemic ecological tipping points, where ecosystems lose their capacity to recover.

Such thresholds could have profound implications for agriculture, water security and urban planning.

In coastal areas, rising sea levels threaten infrastructure and communities, with projections indicating up to 1.5 million Australians at risk by 2050.[9]

Economic costs are expected to exceed $40 billion annually, reflecting the scale of potential disruption.

These projections underscore the need for urgent, coordinated action across all levels of government and industry.

Conclusion

Australia’s biodiversity crisis is no longer a distant warning but an unfolding reality that is reshaping ecosystems, economies and communities.

The rapid increase in threatened species reflects not only environmental degradation but systemic failures in policy, planning and response.

Climate change has emerged as the central force driving this transformation, amplifying existing threats and introducing new uncertainties.

Addressing this crisis requires a fundamental shift from reactive conservation to proactive, integrated strategies that consider entire ecosystems and future climate scenarios.

The choices made in the next decade will determine whether Australia can stabilise its biodiversity or continue towards irreversible ecological loss.

References

  1. Australia’s Environment Report 2025
  2. TERN Report Summary
  3. Black Summer Impacts Analysis
  4. Biodiversity Data Portal
  5. ANU Environmental Analysis
  6. Regional Threatened Species Data
  7. Threat Category Trends
  8. Marine Ecosystem Impacts
  9. Climate Risk Projections

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18/04/2026

Under a Harsh Sun, Australia’s Solar Boom Faces an Unseen Threat - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Key Points
  • UV radiation accelerates degradation in next-generation solar panels 1
  • Solar trackers increase exposure and may shorten panel lifespan 4
  • Northern Australia faces significantly higher degradation risks 6
  • Early failure could raise electricity costs by up to 15% 9
  • Testing standards underestimate Australia’s climate extremes 11
  • Solar waste and replacement cycles threaten circular economy goals 13

Australia’s solar revolution may be wearing out faster than anyone expected.

For years, rooftop panels and vast solar farms have symbolised a clean energy future under Australia’s abundant sun.

Now, emerging research suggests that same sun may be quietly undermining the technology meant to harness it.

A growing body of work led by researchers at UNSW Sydney has identified a “solar panel longevity risk”, driven by intense ultraviolet radiation and extreme heat, conditions that are especially severe across the Australian continent [1].

The implications stretch beyond engineering concerns.

They cut to the heart of Australia’s energy transition, its economic assumptions and the durability of one of its most important climate solutions.

The Mechanics of Degradation

Solar panels degrade over time, a known and accepted reality in the industry.

What is changing is the pace and the mechanism.

Ultraviolet radiation, long considered a secondary factor, is now emerging as a primary driver of material breakdown in modern photovoltaic systems [2].

Next-generation technologies such as PERC, TOPCon and heterojunction cells are designed to capture a broader spectrum of sunlight, including higher-energy wavelengths.

This improves efficiency but exposes sensitive materials to increased photochemical stress.

Encapsulation layers, polymers and cell interfaces can degrade under prolonged UV exposure, leading to microcracks, discolouration and reduced electrical performance [3].

In laboratory conditions, these processes are accelerated.

In Australia’s climate, they may already be occurring at scale.

Solar tracking systems add another layer of complexity.

By following the sun across the sky, single and dual-axis trackers maximise energy yield.

They also maximise exposure to UV radiation and thermal cycling.

Some modelling suggests this could increase degradation rates by around 0.35 percent per year from UV exposure alone [4].

In arid regions, environmental factors compound the problem.

Dust accumulation reduces efficiency and increases surface temperatures.

Vegetation changes, including shrubification driven by climate shifts, can alter airflow and microclimates around installations.

Smoke from bushfires adds another intermittent but significant layer of stress [5].

Geography and Uneven Risk

Australia’s geography makes it uniquely exposed to these dynamics.

Panels installed in northern regions such as Darwin and Townsville face higher UV intensity, higher humidity and more extreme heat than those in southern cities.

These combined stressors accelerate chemical and mechanical degradation processes [6].

Recent modelling suggests that in some tropical and semi-arid regions, solar panel lifespans could fall to as little as 10 to 11 years, far below the typical 25-year warranty expectation [7].

This creates a stark regional divide.

A system installed in Hobart may perform close to its expected lifespan.

The same system in northern Queensland could fail a decade earlier.

The economic implications are significant.

If degradation accelerates across the fleet, total solar output could fall by around 12 percent relative to projections.

That shortfall would need to be made up through new capacity, storage or alternative generation.

Modelling indicates this could push electricity prices 10 to 15 percent higher by mid-century [9].

For households, the risk is more immediate.

Millions of Australians have invested in rooftop solar with the expectation of long-term savings.

If panels degrade faster than expected, those savings shrink, while replacement costs arrive sooner.

For solar farms, the stakes are even higher.

Large-scale projects rely on predictable output over decades to secure financing.

Unexpected degradation introduces uncertainty into revenue models and insurance frameworks [10].

Testing a Changing Climate

One of the most pressing questions is whether current testing standards reflect real-world conditions.

Industry “accelerated life tests” simulate environmental stress over short periods.

However, they typically represent only a fraction of the cumulative exposure experienced over decades in harsh climates.

Researchers argue that existing protocols, which may equate to around 60 days of extreme conditions, fail to capture Australia’s long-term UV and heat load [11].

This gap between testing and reality creates a blind spot in system design and warranty assumptions.

In response, engineers are exploring climate-adapted solutions.

These include UV-resistant encapsulants, improved glass coatings and materials that better withstand thermal expansion.

Some proposals involve “smart tracking” systems that deliberately reduce exposure during peak UV periods, trading a small loss in output for longer lifespan.

These innovations remain in development.

The challenge is scaling them quickly enough to match the pace of solar deployment.

Meanwhile, the issue of waste looms.

Australia currently recycles only a fraction of its solar panels.

If panels begin failing earlier than expected, waste volumes could surge well before existing recycling systems are ready to cope [13].

This risks undermining the environmental credentials of solar energy.

Panels are largely recyclable in theory.

In practice, infrastructure and policy have not kept pace with deployment.

Grid Stability and National Targets

The consequences extend beyond individual systems.

They affect the stability and planning of the entire electricity grid.

Solar generation is inherently variable.

Cloud cover, storms and seasonal changes create fluctuations known as “solar ramps”.

Climate change is increasing the frequency and intensity of these events, complicating grid management [14].

If degradation reduces baseline output, these fluctuations become more pronounced.

Maintaining stability will require greater reliance on batteries, wind generation and pumped hydro.

This adds cost and complexity to the transition.

Australia’s target of 82 percent renewable electricity by 2030 depends on rapid expansion of capacity.

Estimates suggest the nation must add 5 to 6 gigawatts of new generation each year.

If existing assets retire early, a “replacement gap” emerges.

New capacity must cover both growth and replacement, stretching supply chains and investment pipelines [15].

This dynamic is already visible in parts of the National Electricity Market.

Grid operators are balancing record solar penetration with increasing volatility.

The system is adapting, but the margin for error is narrowing.

A System Under Pressure

The solar panel longevity risk does not negate the value of solar energy.

It reframes the assumptions underpinning its expansion.

Australia remains one of the world’s most solar-rich nations.

Its transition to renewables is both necessary and inevitable.

But the findings from recent research suggest that durability, not just capacity, must become a central focus.

Designing systems for Australia’s climate means confronting its extremes directly.

It means aligning testing standards with reality.

It means building recycling systems before waste becomes unmanageable.

And it means recognising that the success of the energy transition depends not only on how much energy is generated, but on how long that generation can be sustained.

The sun has always been Australia’s greatest renewable asset.

It may also prove to be its most demanding adversary.

Conclusion

The emerging evidence around accelerated solar panel degradation marks a critical inflection point for Australia’s energy transition.

What once appeared to be a straightforward scaling challenge now reveals deeper structural risks tied to climate, materials science and long-term system design.

If panels fail earlier than expected, the consequences ripple across households, investors and national infrastructure.

Electricity prices could rise, waste streams could surge and renewable targets could become harder to meet.

Yet the risk is not insurmountable.

It highlights the need for a more mature phase of the transition, one that prioritises resilience alongside expansion.

Australia has the technical expertise, policy frameworks and natural advantages to respond effectively.

The question is whether those systems can evolve quickly enough to match the realities of a changing climate.

In the end, the success of solar power in Australia may depend less on how much sunlight it receives, and more on how well it endures it.

References

  1. UNSW: Hidden UV risk in next-generation solar panels
  2. The Point: UV degradation in solar panels
  3. YourLifeChoices: Solar lifespan risks in Australia
  4. RenewEconomy: Solar trackers and degradation
  5. Solutions4Solar: Climate impacts on solar efficiency
  6. UNSW Research: Climate impacts on PV degradation
  7. PV Tech: Faster degradation of solar modules
  8. Sun Valley Solar: Heat impacts on panels
  9. IndexBox: Global solar UV risk modelling
  10. Yahoo News: Rooftop solar concerns
  11. UNSW: Climate change and PV degradation
  12. Australian Energy Council: Solar waste issue
  13. Climate Council: Renewable waste and recycling
  14. PreventionWeb: Climate impacts on grid stability
  15. Infrastructure Australia: Renewable generation targets

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17/04/2026

As Summers Stretch Across Sydney the Seasons Begin to Collapse - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Summer is no longer a season in Sydney

Key Points
  • Temperature-defined summers are expanding faster than calendar seasons suggest 1
  • Sydney is warming rapidly due to ocean currents and urban heat effects 4
  • Greenhouse physics is extending heat persistence not just peak temperatures 7
  • Shorter transitional seasons are destabilising ecosystems and weather predictability 10
  • Longer summers are increasing health risks and infrastructure strain 13
  • Future projections suggest Sydney could experience half-year summers 18

Why Sydney Is Changing Faster Than Other Cities

Sydney’s rapid summer expansion reflects its exposure to warming ocean currents and coastal atmospheric dynamics [4].

The East Australian Current has intensified and extended southward delivering warmer waters along the coast [7].

This oceanic warming amplifies coastal air temperatures and prolongs heat retention into autumn months [8].

Urban heat island effects are particularly pronounced in Western Sydney where vegetation cover is limited [9].

Rapid suburban expansion has increased heat absorption through concrete and asphalt surfaces [10].

Cleaner air policies may also increase solar radiation reaching the surface by reducing atmospheric aerosols [11].

Defining the “New Summer”

Researchers increasingly define summer using temperature thresholds rather than fixed calendar months to capture lived climate realities [1].

This approach typically uses the 75th percentile of temperatures from a historical baseline to identify sustained warm conditions [2].

Such definitions align more closely with human and ecological experience but can confuse public understanding rooted in traditional seasonal calendars [3].

The reliance on a 1961 to 1990 baseline may understate contemporary warming when compared with pre-industrial conditions [4].

Shifting baselines can significantly alter the perceived magnitude of seasonal expansion depending on the chosen reference period [5].

Uncertainty remains in identifying precise seasonal boundaries due to daily variability and regional climate noise [6].

The Physics of Longer Summers

Global summer length is increasing due to rising greenhouse gas concentrations altering Earth’s energy balance [7].

Heat is not only intensifying but persisting longer due to slower nocturnal cooling [12].

Soil moisture depletion reduces evaporative cooling which prolongs heatwaves [13].

Atmospheric circulation shifts including Hadley Cell expansion are pushing subtropical heat zones poleward [14].

This redistribution of heat alters seasonal timing in mid-latitude regions like Australia [15].

Cumulative heat exposure has greater societal impact than isolated temperature spikes [16].

Abrupt Seasonal Transitions and “Lost” Autumns

Shortening spring and autumn seasons indicate increasing instability in climate systems [10].

Rapid transitions reduce predictability in weather patterns and agricultural planning [17].

Compressed seasons increase the likelihood of compound extreme events such as heatwaves followed by floods [18].

Changes in frost timing and rainfall patterns are already being observed across southeastern Australia [19].

Wind regime shifts further complicate seasonal expectations [20].

Ecosystems are losing seasonal memory as cues for flowering and migration become unreliable [21].

Ecological Disruption and Biological Timing

Timing mismatches are disrupting pollination cycles across Australian ecosystems [21].

Species in New South Wales including native bees and birds are particularly vulnerable to seasonal shifts [22].

Invasive species often adapt more quickly to changing climates gaining competitive advantages [23].

Longer summers increase fuel dryness raising bushfire risk as seen in the 2019 to 2020 Black Summer fires [24].

Marine ecosystems are also affected with coral spawning disrupted by temperature anomalies [25].

Fish migration patterns are shifting along Australia’s east coast [8].

Human Health and Heat Burden

A 49 day increase in summer significantly raises cumulative heat exposure risks [13].

Heat stress and mortality increase as prolonged exposure reduces recovery time [16].

Western Sydney residents face higher risks due to socioeconomic and environmental factors [9].

Hospitals are adapting by expanding heatwave response protocols [26].

Mental health impacts including anxiety and sleep disruption are rising during extended heat periods [27].

Existing heatwave definitions may no longer reflect real-world risks [28].

Infrastructure, Energy, and Economic Strain

Longer summers are shifting electricity demand toward sustained cooling needs [29].

Australia’s grid faces challenges maintaining reliability during prolonged peak demand [30].

Construction and outdoor labour productivity declines in extreme heat [31].

Transport infrastructure suffers from heat-induced damage including rail buckling [32].

Insurers are adjusting risk models to account for increased heat exposure [33].

Work patterns may shift toward cooler hours or seasons [34].

Urban Inequality and Heat Exposure

Western Sydney experiences significantly higher temperatures than coastal suburbs [9].

Urban design including tree cover and building materials strongly influences heat exposure [35].

Lower income households have less access to cooling technologies [36].

Planning policies have struggled to address heat vulnerability effectively [37].

Housing markets may shift as residents seek cooler environments [38].

Internal migration patterns could increasingly reflect climate pressures [39].

Comparing Australian Cities

Melbourne experiences sharper heat spikes due to continental air mass influences [19].

Perth has seen rapid increases in extreme heat days linked to drying trends [40].

Canberra is losing winter days as temperatures rise across seasons [41].

Regional climate models show consistent warming trends across Australian cities [15].

Differences in geography and ocean proximity drive divergent outcomes [4].

These variations may reshape economic competitiveness between cities [42].

Global Context and Comparative Risk

Australian cities show faster seasonal expansion compared with many global counterparts [1].

Mid latitude coastal cities are particularly vulnerable due to ocean warming feedbacks [8].

Cities in Asia and North America are also experiencing similar trends [43].

Warming thresholds of 1.5 to 3 degrees significantly increase seasonal expansion [7].

Some regions may reach tipping points where traditional seasons lose meaning [18].

Global comparisons highlight Australia’s vulnerability to rapid change [15].

Policy, Planning, and Adaptation

Current adaptation strategies often focus on extreme events rather than seasonal shifts [37].

Urban planning must incorporate extended heat periods into design standards [35].

Green infrastructure can significantly reduce urban temperatures [44].

School and work schedules may need adjustment to reflect new climate realities [34].

Government frameworks are beginning to integrate long term climate projections [45].

Policy responses remain uneven across jurisdictions [46].

Future Projections and the “Endless Summer” Scenario

Projections suggest Sydney could experience summers lasting up to six months under high emissions scenarios [18].

These outcomes depend heavily on global mitigation efforts [7].

Extended summers would stress water resources and agriculture [47].

Ecosystems may struggle to adapt to persistent heat conditions [21].

Cultural perceptions of seasons could shift within a generation [3].

Transformation rather than adaptation may become necessary [48].

Media, Communication, and Public Perception

Seasonal change receives less attention than extreme weather events [49].

Journalists face challenges communicating gradual but profound shifts [50].

Framing climate change as seasonal transformation may resonate more strongly [3].

Governments may underemphasise long term seasonal impacts [45].

Narratives of collapsing seasons can help convey lived experience [49].

Public understanding remains a critical barrier to policy action [50].

Conclusion

Across Sydney and much of Australia the idea of summer is quietly being rewritten not by calendars but by physics.

The shift is not merely about hotter days but about the persistence of heat reshaping ecosystems cities and daily life.

What emerges is a new climate reality where seasons blur transitions collapse and predictability erodes.

For policymakers the challenge is no longer preparing for isolated extremes but redesigning systems for sustained stress.

For communities the adjustment may be cultural as much as physical as familiar seasonal rhythms fade.

The question is no longer whether summers are lengthening but how far this transformation will go before society fundamentally changes in response.

References

  1. Global shifts in seasonal length
  2. Seasonal temperature thresholds study
  3. CSIRO climate change overview
  4. Bureau of Meteorology State of the Climate
  5. IPCC AR6 Working Group I
  6. Seasonal variability uncertainty study
  7. IPCC physical science basis
  8. East Australian Current intensification
  9. Western Sydney heat research
  10. Seasonal shifts and extremes
  11. Aerosol reduction warming effects
  12. Night-time warming study
  13. AIHW heatwave health impacts
  14. Hadley Cell expansion
  15. CSIRO climate models
  16. Heat burden health study
  17. Australian agriculture climate impacts
  18. Future seasonal projections
  19. BoM climate change trends
  20. Wind regime changes
  21. Phenology disruption study
  22. NSW climate impacts
  23. Invasive species climate advantage
  24. Bushfire Royal Commission report
  25. AIMS coral bleaching

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16/04/2026

Up to our eyeballs in 💩💩💩 - Julian Cribb

                                      AUTHOR
Julian Cribb AM is an Australian science writer and author of seven books on the human existential emergency. His latest book is How to Fix a Broken Planet (Cambridge University Press, 2023)

Every day humans produce more than a megatonne of excrement and then distribute half of it around the Earth without treatment. We are literally poop-bombing the planet, and every human we add contributes to the pile-on.

Little wonder that our rivers, lakes, harbours and marine parks are becoming dangerously unusable, undrinkable, unswimmable and infested with blooms of toxic algae, disease-causing bacteria, parasites and other noxious lifeforms. We are up to our eyes in the brown stuff.

The average person is said to produce 128g of faeces a day, so 8 people produce a kilo, and 8 billion produce a billion kilos of ordure, a million tonnes a day, or 365 megatonnes every year. The rich, of course, produce a lot more poop than do the poor, as the average rich person swallows 35,000 more meals over their lifetime than does a poor person, besides having larger serves. This tends to emerge in the World Obesity Index.

Treated, partly-treated or untreated, most of our sewage or its nutrient-rich effluent, ends up in the local river, creek or groundwater, and thence flows into the nearest ocean according to a survey by the universities of Utrecht and the United Nations.

Broadly speaking, this is what we do with poo:

  • High-income countries: ~74% of wastewater is treated
  • Upper-middle-income countries: ~43% treated
  • Lower-middle-income countries: ~26% treated
  • Low-income countries: ~4.3% treated,

which, geographically, looks like this: 

Figure 1. World wastewater treatment rates.
Source: UNU

However, what looks superficially like an unsavoury local water issue is rapidly emerging into something much bigger – a major planetary pollution threat. The poop-bombing of the Earth.

The world’s rivers are in crisis. The International Rivers website and Global Rivers Report list the following rivers as having the poorest water quality on the planet, the pollution usually including raw sewage as well as industrial waste:

Mekong (SE Asia), Citarum (Indonesia), Ganges (India), Yamuna (India), Buriganga (Bangladesh), Marilao (Philiipines), Sarno (Italy), Yellow (China), Tiete (Brazil), Jordan (West Asia), Columbia (USA), Dvina (Europe), Neva (Russia), Amu-Darya (Central Asia), Tocantins (Brazil) Mississippi (USA), Orinoco (South America), Sao Francisco (Brazil), Wisla (Poland).

Figure 2. World’s most polluted rivers and their catchments.
Source: State of the World’ s Rivers 2026


The 2025 Rivers report notes that, even in countries where sewage is treated “In many cities, raw sewage flows directly into rivers due to old, leaky, or nonexistent treatment systems.“ This is increasing global contamination levels.

“Cities like Delhi (22m), Dhaka (10m), and Manila (13m) treat less than 30% of their wastewater. Combined with stormwater, this floods rivers with pathogens, pharmaceuticals, and microplastics. For example, the Yamuna River in India receives more than 800 million litres of untreated sewage per day from Delhi alone.”

The result is a rise in cases of cholera, typhoid, hepatitis, eye and skin diseases. Over 100,000 deaths a year are attributed to polluted water in the Ganges and Yamuna rivers alone.

One area that is becoming heavily polluted, according to a team of Australian scientists, are coastal marine parks, the cornerstone of global ocean conservation. Coral reefs, seagrass beds, mangroves and other vital fish nurseries are being overloaded with nutrients from human sewage and wastewater, they say.

Studying water quality in 1,855 marine parks worldwide, the researchers found that the parks were consistently more polluted than unprotected areas of sea, pointing to careless human waste management. Around 55% of the world’s coral reefs and 88% of its seagrass ecosystems are exposed to wastewater pollution, they said.

The main pollutant is nitrogen, which acts as a fertiliser in freshwater and marine ecosystems, promoting the growth of algal blooms and seaweeds which smother the corals. Climate change has accelerated problem, providing the warmer conditions and stratification of the water column that, with added nutrients, cause algae to explode.

Fuelled by human waste and fertiliser runoff, toxic algae are taking over lakes, rivers, reservoirs and coastal zones around the Planet, such as the Great Lakes of North America, and picturesque Lake Windermere in Britain. In a worst case scenario, this process could return the Earth to its state two billion years ago when algae ruled the planet and conditions were unfit for higher life-forms.

Britain is a shocking example of the sewage dilemma, where the privatisation of public water authorities led to reckless profiteering by the private corporations that now run it, and a massive increase in the discharge of human waste into its rivers, 84% of which are now in poor health.

It is not just nutrients, either. The discharge of human waste includes steroid oestrogens – female sex hormones – which have been shown to cause male fish to change sex, While it is not the only cause, the clumsy management of human waste is now a primary suspect in the feminisation of human males worldwide. The effects may include crashing sperm counts, growth of male breasts, increased risk of breast cancer in men, changes in sexual preference and loss of male secondary sexual characteristics.

The average human produces 4.5 kg of nitrogen (N), more than a half kg of phosphorous (P), and 1.2 kg of potassium (K) a year in their waste (urine and faeces). This is an invaluable resource that is hardly used globally today, except as an environmental pollutant.

The world fertiliser industry produces around 100 million tonnes of raw N per year, worth over $40 billion, without which a human population of 8.3 billion could not possibly be sustained. Fertilisers are the primary reason that humans have overpopulated the Earth.

However, we also produce 37 million tonnes of raw N in our waste, which is mostly thrown away into the environment where it causes untold harm. If converted to fertiliser this would be worth around $15 billion, and feed nearly three billion people. Unfortunately, this colossal waste is increasing, not decreasing.

Figure 3. Nutrient flows are among the most serious threats to a habitable Earth.
Source: Stockholm Resilience Institute 2025
.


The Stockholm Institute’s Safe Planetary Boundaries (above) show that nitrogen and phosphorus (‘biogeochemical flows’) are among the most dangerous assaults humans are making on a habitable Earth – worse even than climate change or extinctions.

It’s not that humans are adding any extra N and P to the Earth system, but rather we are massively concentrating these pollutants in both space and time, to the point where they are going to start rendering the planet uninhabitable, either by us or other large animals. In this we risk turning our world back onto a place fit only for microbes and algae.

What will be history’s verdict on a civilisation that can invent artificial intelligence – but hasn’t the brains to manage and recycle its own waste?

Nature’s verdict is already plain. It is telling us we cannot survive in the long run if we continue to sh*t in our own nest.

Julian Cribb Articles

15/04/2026

As the Climate Warms, Australia’s Snakes Are on the Move - Lethal Heating Editor BDA

Australia’s warming climate is reshaping where snakes live,
how they behave, and how often humans encounter them.

Key Points
  • Climate change is altering snake behaviour, metabolism, and seasonal activity patterns 1
  • Rising inland heat is pushing species toward coastal regions and urban fringes 2
  • Venomous snakes such as eastern browns are expanding into suburban environments 3
  • Habitat loss and extreme weather are driving both expansion and contraction of snake populations 4
  • Snake encounters and emergency responses are increasing in eastern Australia 5
  • Urban planning, healthcare systems, and citizen science are adapting to new risks 6


Across the continent, rising temperatures and shifting rainfall patterns are driving profound changes in snake ecology.

Scientists and emergency responders are increasingly observing patterns that suggest a redistribution of species, particularly toward the eastern seaboard.

These changes are not occurring in isolation, but reflect broader ecological disruption linked to climate change.

Behavioural Shifts and Ecological Disruption

Warmer temperatures are accelerating snake metabolism, which in turn increases feeding frequency and movement.

Research shows that ectothermic animals such as snakes respond quickly to thermal changes, altering activity windows and seasonal behaviour [1].

In practical terms, this means longer active seasons and more frequent encounters with humans.

In parts of New South Wales, wildlife rescuers report earlier spring emergence and prolonged autumn activity.

Extreme heat events are also forcing snakes into atypical refuges, including sheds, garages, and residential structures.

Drought conditions reduce natural shelter and prey availability, pushing snakes into closer proximity with human environments.

Changes in prey distribution, particularly rodents and amphibians, are further reshaping snake behaviour.

As prey species shift in response to climate pressures, snakes follow.

Inland Heat and Coastal Migration Pressures

Australia’s interior is warming faster than many coastal regions, creating strong thermal gradients across the landscape.

Studies indicate that species distributions are shifting toward cooler and more stable climates, often closer to the coast [2].

This movement is not a simple migration, but a gradual redistribution influenced by habitat connectivity.

River systems, remnant vegetation corridors, and agricultural landscapes act as pathways.

Species such as the eastern brown snake are particularly adaptable and capable of exploiting fragmented habitats.

Coastal regions are increasingly acting as climate refugia, offering more reliable water sources and moderate temperatures.

However, these refuges are under pressure from urban expansion and land use change.

The sustainability of these habitats remains uncertain as climate impacts intensify.

Expansion of Venomous Species into Urban Areas

The eastern brown snake, one of the world’s most venomous species, is at the centre of growing concern.

Distribution models suggest a southward and coastal expansion linked to warming temperatures and altered rainfall patterns [3].

Urban heat islands are amplifying these effects by creating warmer microclimates within cities.

Suburbs with abundant prey, shelter, and water sources can replicate key aspects of natural habitat.

Western Sydney provides a clear example, where rapid urban growth intersects with remnant bushland.

Residents increasingly report sightings in backyards, parks, and drainage corridors.

Similar trends are emerging in the Hunter region and Central Coast.

Urban environments are not just incidental habitats, but are becoming established components of snake ranges.

Habitat Contraction and Population Viability

While some species expand their range, others face contraction due to habitat loss.

Desertification, intensified bushfires, and ecosystem collapse are reducing viable habitats in inland regions.

Evidence suggests that extreme conditions can exceed physiological tolerances for some species [4].

Inland populations may decline as water sources disappear and prey becomes scarce.

Major flood events can also disrupt populations by displacing individuals and altering ecosystems.

The long-term stability of snake populations depends on the balance between adaptation and environmental limits.

These dynamics highlight the uneven impacts of climate change across species.

Regional Hotspots: New South Wales and Victoria

Climate projections indicate that eastern Australia will experience increased temperatures and variable rainfall.

In New South Wales, western Sydney and peri-urban corridors are emerging as high-risk zones for snake encounters.

Population growth in these areas is intersecting with expanding snake habitats.

In Victoria, regions such as Gippsland and outer Melbourne suburbs are seeing similar trends.

Modelling studies show strong correlations between warming temperatures and expanded suitable habitat ranges.

These projections suggest that encounters will become more frequent by mid-century.

Localised climate conditions, including soil moisture and vegetation cover, play a critical role.

Changing Risk Landscapes in Suburban Backyards

Backyards are increasingly becoming attractive habitats for snakes.

Features such as water tanks, dense vegetation, compost piles, and rodent populations create ideal conditions.

Native gardening trends, while beneficial for biodiversity, can inadvertently provide shelter.

Poorly managed waste and structural gaps in housing increase the likelihood of incursions.

Suburban layouts with green corridors and drainage systems facilitate movement.

These environments blur the boundary between urban and natural habitats.

As inland conditions deteriorate, these suburban refuges become more important.

Urban Planning and Policy Responses

Local councils are beginning to recognise the implications of shifting snake ecology.

Planning guidelines increasingly incorporate biodiversity considerations.

Green corridors are being designed to manage wildlife movement, although their effectiveness varies.

Some experts advocate for “snake-aware” design principles in new developments.

These include reducing shelter opportunities near homes and managing vegetation strategically.

Balancing human safety with ecological integrity remains a key challenge.

Policy responses are still evolving as evidence accumulates.

Public Health Trends and Emergency Response Data

Emergency services report rising call-outs for snake sightings in many parts of eastern Australia.

Data indicates a relationship between temperature anomalies and increased snake activity [5].

Heatwaves and heavy rainfall events often precede spikes in encounters.

Ambulance services are adapting by improving training and response protocols.

Snakebite incidents remain relatively rare but carry significant risk.

Public awareness campaigns emphasise avoidance and first aid.

The trend suggests a changing risk landscape that requires ongoing monitoring.

Healthcare System Preparedness and Antivenom Distribution

Australia maintains one of the world’s most advanced antivenom systems.

However, shifting snake distributions raise questions about future preparedness.

Health authorities are monitoring trends to adjust stock distribution.

Rural and peri-urban hospitals face particular challenges due to resource constraints.

Climate modelling is beginning to inform healthcare planning.

Training for medical professionals is critical in high-risk regions.

Gaps in awareness could increase vulnerability in newly affected areas.

Citizen Science and Real-Time Monitoring

Citizen science initiatives are playing a growing role in tracking snake movements.

Platforms that allow public reporting provide valuable real-time data.

Researchers are increasingly integrating these datasets with climate models [6].

This approach improves predictive accuracy and spatial resolution.

Public participation also raises awareness of changing ecological patterns.

Scaling these initiatives could significantly enhance monitoring capacity.

The integration of technology and community engagement represents a promising frontier.

Broader Climate and Ecological Implications

Shifting snake distributions reflect wider ecosystem disruption.

Snakes function as both predators and prey, making them integral to ecological balance.

Changes in their distribution can cascade through food webs.

Some scientists consider snakes potential indicator species for climate stress.

Their responses highlight vulnerabilities in ecosystems under pressure.

These dynamics underscore the interconnected nature of climate impacts.

The challenge lies in adapting to these changes while maintaining biodiversity.

Conclusion

Australia’s snakes are responding to climate change in ways that are both predictable and deeply disruptive.

Rising temperatures, shifting rainfall patterns, and intensifying extreme events are altering behaviour, redistributing populations, and increasing human interaction.

The movement of species toward coastal and urban areas reflects broader ecological shifts that extend beyond any single group of animals.

These changes are already visible in emergency response data, urban planning challenges, and emerging scientific research.

At the same time, they reveal gaps in preparedness, particularly in rapidly growing peri-urban regions.

The response will require coordination across environmental management, public health, and urban design.

It will also depend on improved data collection, including the integration of citizen science and advanced modelling.

Ultimately, the story of Australia’s snakes is a story about adaptation, both by wildlife and by the societies that live alongside them.

As the climate continues to warm, coexistence will depend on understanding these changes and responding with foresight and care.

References

  1. IPCC AR6 Climate Change Impacts Report
  2. CSIRO State of the Climate Report
  3. Climate-driven range shifts in Australian reptiles
  4. Global vulnerability of ectotherms to climate warming
  5. AIHW Snakebite and Injury Data Australia
  6. Atlas of Living Australia Citizen Science Platform

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