03/10/2016

Good News For Asian Elephants As India Ratifies Climate Deal

SBS - Lisa Upton

Scientists who work with wild Asian elephants have welcomed India’s move to ratify the global agreement on climate change.
Wild Asian elephants in Karnataka, southern India. (Nishant Srinivasaiah)
Nishant Srinivasaiah is a certain breed of person, one with a deep reservoir of patience. He spends hours, that stretch into days, waiting and hoping to observe Asian elephants in the wild. “I don’t always have patience with people, but I do with elephants,” he laughs.
Backpack on, binoculars in hand, the PhD student has offered to let SBS join him for the day as he searches for three elephants he’s been observing for many years in the southern Indian state of Karnataka.                 
The leader of the group he calls Tin Tin because his tusks move up in the same direction as Tin Tin’s hair. The others are PT Junior (Perfect Tusks) and Sam (sub-adult male).
Tin Tin, PT Junior and Sam have moved out of a national park to land near a local village, looking for food; there’s nothing more nutritious than an irrigated crop. It’s a risky strategy for both elephants and humans.
“People around here say they’re very scared to come out of their houses,” says Mr Srinivasaiah.
“Similarly for elephants, they’re extremely scared when they’re moving around at night. Increasingly, their behaviour might get more aggressive.”
Mr Srinivasaiah’s study area covers 6000 square kilometres across the states of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. In the past month, elephants have killed seven people in this area.


Scientists say climate change will bring more extreme weather events, like droughts, which will force hungry elephants to go in search of food. Invariably, this will lead to conflict.
These elephant scientists have welcomed India’s move to ratify the global agreement on climate change agreed in Paris last year.
More than 60 countries have now ratified the agreement representing almost 52 per cent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions.
Once that figure reaches 55 per cent the deal comes into effect.
India’s Minister of External Affairs, Sushma Swaraj, said October 2 was a significant day for India to ratify the agreement.
“This has been well thought out,” she told the United Nations recently.
“It is the birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi who epitomised a lifestyle with the smallest carbon footprint.”
Professor Raman Sukumar, of the Indian Institute of Science and one of the world’s leading Asian elephant experts, says the move is significant.
“I think India has taken a very bold step and joined the global community in its commitment to reduce the emissions of greenhouse gases and dangerous global warming,” he said.
In 1983, Professor Sukumar witnessed the behaviour of a clan of elephants forced from its natural habitat as a result of one of India’s worst droughts.
“Approximately 50 elephants left the states of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka and marched off into the northern regions of Andhra Pradesh where wild elephants had not been seen in the last 300 to 400 years, and there was this sharp escalation in conflict between elephants and people,” he says.
The elephants trampled agriculture crops and dozens of people were killed.
“My fears are that with climate change, with heat waves or the failure of the monsoon, the elephants’ habitat would be highly stressed, that these populations will now start coming out of their natural habitat and starting wandering in human dominated landscapes,” says Professor Sukumar.
“I really don’t think we’re fully prepared to deal with this conflict because of the scale and the magnitude.
“Dealing with this conflict would mean developing the management skills to handle large numbers of elephants. The animals may not just have to be driven back, they may have to be captured and transported back to the forest. Some of the elephants may have to be captured and kept in captivity.”
The Asian elephant is found in 13 countries. India has more than half the global population with an estimated 25,000 to 30,000 in the wild.
But even the most ambitious climate agreement isn't going to stop extreme weather events and their impact on the Asian elephant.
Indian experts say the focus must be on managing the conflict that's coming.
Professor Sukumar says in future local people will need to be educated about how to behave if they encounter wild elephants.
Mr Srinivasaiah often sees villagers getting too close to elephants, assuming they’re docile creatures.
That didn’t happen on the day SBS joined Mr Srinivasaiah.
Tin Tin, PT Junior and Sam spent the day in a dry lake, camouflaged by ipomea weed and undisturbed by humans.
But as the sun set the mighty animals moved on in search of water.
The erratic weather may make some pessimistic about their future, but India’s elephant experts believe the animal is as tough as its hide; that it will survive and adapt to a warming planet.

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Medical Staff In Dark About Policies To Mitigate Health Risks Of Climate Change, Study Says

The Guardian

While some states have begun developing climate and health policies, 65% said they were not aware of any such policies
A heatwave in Melbourne. Australian health professionals overwhelmingly say they don’t know of any policies that deal with the health implications of climate change. Photograph: Tracey Nearmy/AAP
Australian health professionals overwhelmingly say they don’t know of any policies that deal with the health implications of climate change, despite the World Health Organisation saying “climate change is the greatest threat to global health in the 21st century”.
The results come from the first national snapshot of the knowledge and views of doctors, nurses, health academics and other health professionals on the topic of climate and health.
They were collected by the Climate and Health Alliance, as the group prepares to present its national strategy on climate, health and wellbeing discussion paper to politicians in Canberra this month.
Liz Hanna, the president of the Climate and Health Alliance, said the strategy was supported by groups representing most of the health industry and represented the most important move in the climate and health space in Australia to date.
When the analysis of the survey results was performed, 134 health professionals or representatives of health organisations had completed the survey.
The group was highly aware of climate and health-related issues, with every respondent able to identify at least five of eight major health risks that climate change will bring, including food insecurity, increases in infectious diseases and mental health issues.
Despite that, 45% of respondents said they were not aware of the only national climate change adaptation strategy that deals with health – the National Resilience and Adaptation Strategy. Just 7% said they were “fully aware” of the strategy.
While some states have begun developing climate and health policies, 65% of respondents said they were not aware of any such policies.
“Overwhelmingly, the seemingly well-informed group could not identify many policies at national or state levels specifically targeting the health effects of climate change,” the report said.
Hanna said the lack of awareness was a result of the policies being very minimal. She said the health policies in the National Climate Resilience and Adaptation Strategy were mostly useless. “They’re motherhood statements, rather than anything that has any capacity to make a difference,” Hanna said.
Ninety-eight per cent of the respondents said they supported the development of a National Strategy for Climate, Health and Wellbeing.
Comments in the survey would be used by the Climate and Health Alliance to inform later iterations of the strategy, Hanna said.
Hanna said that, among wealthy countries, Australia was particularly vulnerable to the health impacts of climate change since it had such variable rainfall and was already very hot.
As temperatures rise, the health implications are going to force change in almost every sector, she said.
“In cold countries, landlords and people who manage public housing are required by law to have adequate heating,” Hanna said. “We’re going to get to that point but with cooling.
“It will have to permeate all the way through to cricket clubs, who have members playing out in the sun during the day.”
When the group goes to Canberra this month to present the strategy, it will be joined by representatives from medical colleges, hospital networks and alliances and associations of other health professionals.
“What we’re doing as a health sector is letting the politicians know that there are lots of things that need to be done and we’re here to help,” Hanna said.

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Betting The Farm: Farmers Confront Climate Change

ABC Background Briefing - Jo Chandler

Climate change is here, and Australian agriculture is acutely feeling the effects. Three farmers explain how it's impacting their lives and livelihoods.
George Mills at Panshanger, near Longford in Tasmania. (ABC Rural: Rosemary Grant)
Climate change makes farming more of a gamble than it ever was. It should be a complete concern to everyone who eats on this planet, because the whole world is going to be gambling on food production.
Real-world observations of temperature spikes, pasture growth and grape harvests across southern Australia reveal that the landscape is heating up at rates experts did not expect to see until 2030.
In some instances the rates of warming are tracking at 2050 scenarios.
Scientists concerned that climate change is biting harder and faster than models anticipated are campaigning for more research investment to protect Australia's $58 billion agriculture industry from extreme weather.
Background Briefing has learned that their concerns about the capability of Australian research to address climate change will be validated in an independent review by the prestigious Australian Academy of Science.
The review, due for release in the next few weeks, has identified a substantial shortfall in the nation's climate research firepower.
It's understood that the review will recommend that the number of scientists working for CSIRO and its partners on climate science needs to increase by about 90. That is almost double the current number of full time positions.
Meanwhile, the reality is already confronting farmers on the front line, many of them battered by this last year of wild conditions.
Mark McDougall on his potato farm in Tasmania. (ABC RN: Jo Chandler)
Climate change is here, there is no doubt about it ... The hip pocket is when it makes you decide it is here or not, and it hurt our hip pockets, so we know. 
We're going to be still digging spuds at the end of September. We've never done that before, ever — it's a bugger. It's normally the end of May, middle of June, so we're miles behind. We pre-watered before we even planted the crop. Then as soon as we planted, we were watering straight away, then we went from that through until January. We got a rain event at the end of January which wiped out about 1,500 tonnes. Then at the end of April we got another rain event, and lost about another 1,500 tonnes. It costs about $1,000,000 of turnover. It's people we employ who don't get to work. It affects the community, it affects everyone. If that's not climate change, I don't know what is. I've been farming this area all of my life. I've only ever seen one dry period like that before, but never seen the rain events like that.
Brett McClen, chief viticulturist at Brown Brothers. (Supplied: Brown Brothers)
We are seeing grapes ripening faster and ripening within a much shorter timeframe than they once did.
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