The NSW Audit Office has released a scathing report on the government’s ability to cope with the effects of a heating climate, finding critical assets and services had yet to conduct risk assessments, such as for the state’s $50 billion public housing portfolio.
The findings, released on Tuesday, examined how effectively the Treasury and Planning departments supported agencies to get ready for increased threats from flooding, extreme heat, coastal erosion and other perils.
The NSW government is not taking the necessary steps to prepare
agencies for climate change risks, the Audit Office has found. Credit: Nick Moir
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“The absence of an overall adaptation strategy, and a statewide action plan, means that the [Planning] department’s climate risk and adaptation-related activities...have been occurring for at least four years without strategic direction, strong levers for co-ordination across agencies, and clear resourcing towards defined outcomes,” the Audit Office concluded.
Treasury had separately estimated that the annual fiscal and economic costs associated with natural disasters due to climate change will more than triple by 2061. Even so, there was little co-ordination between agencies, with nine government entities responsible for $120 billion alone in assets failing to complete risk reviews.
NSW has endured a battering from the elements in recent years, ranging from a severe drought, the worst bushfires on record during the 2019-20 Black Summer, and last March’s extensive flooding around Sydney.
Despite setting emissions reductions targets – such as reaching net-zero carbon pollution by 2050 – climate change readiness policies have generally been lacking, with the National Parks and Wildlife Service among the few exceptions, the Audit Office said.
The Herald approached Treasurer Dominic Perrottet, Planning Minister Rob Stokes and Environment Minister Matt Kean for comment.
“The NSW government is determined to take decisive and responsible action to reduce emissions to net zero and manage the physical and financial impacts of climate change,” a Planning spokeswoman said, adding it would “closely consider its recommendations to bolster the state’s response”.
Among the gaps identified was the failure of the Land and Housing Corporation, which holds $50 billion of social housing assets to conduct a review. Projections for “significant increases in the number of heatwaves” mean it will get harder to limit the risk of heatstroke and other poor health outcomes for residents, the report found.
The problems are not just confined to the public sector either. The Building Sustainability Index (BASIX), a sustainable planning measure to drive cuts in residential water and energy use, is under review, but Planning is not considering the potential impact of climate change to these requirements, the Audit Office said.
“[H]omes in NSW are currently being built for the present, but not for a potential future climate,” it said.
Even in the eastern suburbs of Sydney, energy cooling requirements are set to rise 70 per cent by 2030 compared with 2020, and 300 per cent by 2070, the Audit Office said, according to a report commissioned by one council in January.
Labor’s climate spokesman Jihad Dib said the government “might promise a big game on climate change, but this report clearly shows they do not have the ability or desire to meet their own promises”.
“The people of NSW should be concerned that the Strategic Plan for the Climate Change Fund has never been finalised,” he said.
Independent NSW MP Justin Field said “a failure to plan is a plan to fail, and it is clear that the NSW government’s plan to mitigate and adapt to climate change is inadequate”.
Brad McCutcheon, a resident of St George Caravan Park, surveys
the scene during flooding of the Hawkesbury River near Sydney in
March 2021. Credit: Nick Moir
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Local government was also getting little assistance from Planning, the Audit Office said, noting that the department’s 2018 Guide to preparing Local Environmental Plans (LEPs) for councils does not mention climate change.
Extreme weather |
Even 1.5C warming will still leave world’s coasts exposed to
extremes |
Another gap is in Crown Lands, an agency that oversees about 42 per cent of NSW’s land area including coasts and infrastructure, but had failed to develop adaptation plans.
“Crown lands will be increasingly exposed to climate risks, including risks associated with sea level rises,” the report said, noting CSIRO data showing sea levels already risen by about 25 centimetres since 1880.
Links
- NSW Audit Office: Managing climate risks to assets and services
- (AU SMH) ‘Really Big Win’: NSW Environmental Watchdog Ordered To Address Climate Change
- (AU SMH) Grim Climate Forecasts Point To Shrivelling Rivers In Northern NSW
- (AU The Guardian) Why Is Australia Building A $600m Gas Power Plant As World Experts Warn Against Fossil Fuels?
- (SMH AU) Damage Bill From Natural Disasters To Treble By 2061
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