25/02/2021

Climate Change 'The Biggest Security Threat Ever Faced By Modern Humans', David Attenborough Warns

SBS - Reuters

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and veteran naturalist David Attenborough made direct pleas on Tuesday to the UN Security Council to take urgent action on the climate crisis or face worsening global instability.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson watches a video address by Sir David Attenborough at a session of the UN Security Council. Source: PA Wire

British naturalist David Attenborough warned on Tuesday that climate change is the biggest security threat that modern humans have ever faced, telling the UN Security Council: “I don’t envy you the responsibility that this places on all of you.”

Mr Attenborough, the world’s most influential wildlife broadcaster, addressed a virtual meeting of the 15-member council on climate-related risks to international peace and security, chaired by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

“If we continue on our current path, we will face the collapse of everything that gives us our security: food production, access to fresh water, habitable ambient temperature and ocean food chains,” Mr Attenborough said.

"And if the natural world can no longer support the most basic of our needs, then most of the rest of civilization will quickly break down. Please make no mistake, climate change is the biggest threat to security that modern humans have ever faced," he said.

With the world struggling to cut planet-warming emissions fast enough to avoid catastrophic warming, the United Nations will stage a climate summit in November in Glasgow, Scotland.

“It is literally our last, best hope to get on track and to get this right,” US climate envoy John Kerry told the council.

The November summit serves as a deadline for countries to commit to deeper emissions cuts.



It will be the most important gathering since the 2015 event that yielded the Paris Agreement, when nearly 200 countries committed to halt rising temperatures quickly enough to avoid catastrophic change.

“I know that there are people around the world who will say that this is all kind of green stuff from a bunch of tree-hugging, tofu munchers and not suited to international diplomacy and international politics,” Mr Johnson told the council.

“I couldn’t disagree more profoundly.”

‘Long way to go’

Russia and China question whether the Security Council is the right forum to be discussing climate change.

“We agree that climate change and environmental issues can exacerbate conflict. But are they really the root cause of these conflicts? There are serious doubts about this,” Russia’s UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, speaks as he hosts the UN Security Council's virtual meeting on climate change risks in London. Bloomberg POOL 

China’s climate envoy Xie Zhenhua described climate change as a development issue.

“Sustainable development holds the master key to solving all problems and eliminating the root causes of conflicts,” he said.

Mr Kerry said: “We bury our heads in the sand at our own peril. It is time to start treating the climate crisis like the urgent security threat that it is. This is literally the challenge of all of our generations.”

The Paris accord aims to cap the rise in temperatures to “well below” two degrees Celsius and as close as possible to 1.5C to avoid the most devastating impacts of climate change.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres pushed countries, companies, cities and financial institutions to make ambitious commitments to cut global emissions. China and the United States are the world’s biggest emitters of greenhouse gases.

“We still have a long way to go, and we look to the major emitters to lead by example in the coming months,” Mr Guterres told the council.

“This is a credibility test of their commitment to people and planet. It is the only way we will keep the 1.5-degree goal within reach.”

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(AU) Renewable Energy Boom Could Force Coal Power To Close Early, Says New Report

ABC NewsBen Millington

AGL's Bayswater power station in the NSW Hunter Valley. (Supplied: Hunter Community Environment Centre)

Key Points
  • Solar and wind plants will add 70,000GWh to the grid by 2025
  • Coal-fired generation will drop by 28 per cent
  • Industry acknowledges increasing pressure
An analysis of Australia's energy market has found a number of the nation's coal-fired power stations could be financially unviable by 2025 and at least one may be forced to close early.

The joint report by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) think thank and advisory firm Green Energy Markets attempts to quantify the mounting pressure on coal-fired plants, as a flood of cheaper and more flexible renewable power hits the grid.

The most vulnerable power stations were in NSW with concerns that sudden closures would lead to a shortfall in dispatchable electricity, unless the transition was better managed.

"The market is facing a tidal wave of new supply, much greater than anything government authorities or market analysts forecast or even contemplated just two years ago," Green Energy Markets director Tristan Edis said.

"The supply added from 2018 to 2025 equates to over a third of the entire demand in the National Electricity Market (NEM), and more than eight times the annual generation of the Liddell coal-fired power station in NSW.
"So something has got to give."
Between 2018 to 2025, new wind and solar plants will add 70,000 gigawatt hours of extra supply, which is greater than the entire annual electricity consumption of New South Wales, the report said.

Prices close to zero Co-author Johanna Bowyer from IEEFA said the extra energy will lead to a collapse in output from many of the existing fossil fuel generators.

"They will be displaced because wind and solar have no fuel cost and typically bid into the market with prices close to zero," she said.
"We predict that gas power station output will fall by 78 per cent and coal output by 28 per cent by 2025 compared to 2018 levels."
Wind turbines. (Fabrizio Bensch, file photo: Reuters)
         
The report said the extra supply of renewable energy could make electricity prices more volatile but also cheaper on average, which would further impact the profitability of coal plants.

The Liddel power station in the NSW Hunter is already set to close in 2023, but the report said at least one more closure in the state is likely before 2025.

It listed Eraring, Vales Point and Mt Piper in NSW and Yallourn in Victoria as most vulnerable.

"What we really need to be doing is planning to replace those coal-fired power plants with something that can help balance out the wind and the solar and is really flexible, because that's the problem for coal," Mr Edis said.

He said gas could play a role in the short term, while pumped hydro and large-scale battery storage would likely be more competitive and green solutions in the long term.
"One thing is clear, that propping up coal is probably not practical, and it's certainly a very dumb idea to build new coal power plants," he said.
An electricity tower rises into the sky. (Pexels.com)

Early closures predicted The report echoes recent comments by the independent chair of the Energy Security Board, Dr Kerry Schott, who is working on major reforms to the National Electricity Market to help it cope with the energy transformation.
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Last week she said renewables are making coal increasingly unprofitable and warned that coal-fired power plants could close four to five years earlier than anticipated.

Under that scenario all four of the coal plants in the NSW Hunter region would be gone by 2030.

"What Kerry Schott I think is doing, is saying we need to get on top of this and manage it," the Grattan Institute's energy director, Tony Wood, said.

Mr Wood said the analysis in the IEEFA/Green Energy Markets report was on the "aggressive end", but "not at all implausible."

He said the uncertainty in the energy sector was a significant problem, in-part caused by conflicting government policies to support both renewables and traditional generators.

"The sooner we get a lot more credibility and predictability into our energy and climate policy, the sooner we'll see a reduction in what might be some potential for nasty problems," he said.

Solar farm, Hughenden QLD. (ABC Rural: Tom Major) 

Last week Origin Energy CEO Frank Calabria revealed the country's largest coal-fired power station at Eraring in NSW was already suffering from low wholesale prices and flagged the early closure of plants.

"I would go as far to say that wholesale prices are unsustainable, there will be a supply response — it's just whether it's planned or unplanned. And that's really where the market is at today," he said, while delivering Origin's mid-year results.
"I think it's actually going to be a pretty messy period of time, and I think you will see us running our generation less at Eraring. That's what you're seeing now."
Origin, AGL, Neoen and CEP Energy are all planning massive battery projects in a bid to prepare for the future.

The Australian Energy Council, which represents coal, gas, hydro and renewable generators, said the wholesale energy market was seeing "major changes" as more renewables come into the system.

"That is putting added pressure on coal-fired generators in particular," AEC Chief Executive Sarah McNamara said.

"The key issues will be ensuring an orderly exit of older thermal plant, as well as investment in dispatchable generation and encouraging the right overall mix of resources and system services to maintain system security and reliability."

She said these challenges have been flagged by the Energy Security Board, which will be essential to coordinating the grid and supporting timely and efficient investments.

"Their work is made more challenging where governments impose policies outside the national market arrangements, and which can exacerbate the issues identified in this report," she said.

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(AU) Our 'Tree-Change' And 'Sea-Change' Dreams Are Under Threat As Scientists Warn About Building Homes In 'Risky Areas'

ABC Science - Nick Kilvert

Lifestyle zonings on city fringes will need to be removed due to bushfire risk, researchers say. (Supplied: Tony C Mathew)

Key Points
  • "Scattered" housing in "at risk" coastal and bush areas stretch emergency services and involve energy-intensive lifestyles
  • Researchers say we need to build climate-resilient communities as we recover from natural disasters
  • Industry experts say people may be left with worthless properties in a few decades' time if we don't act now
In the aftermath of out-of-control bushfires once again devastating parts of Australia, this time in the west, researchers say we cannot continue rebuilding in "at risk" areas.

"Sea-change" or "tree-change" settlements "scattered" along coastlines or into bushland are often more vulnerable to extreme weather events, involve more energy intensive lifestyles, and can stretch emergency services during crises.

The researchers have argued their case in a paper published today in Nature Urban Sustainability.

They say zoning must change to prevent future development in at-risk areas, and planning and rebuilding should focus on community models that can serve as blueprints for our transition to climate-resilient towns and cities.

Barbara Norman, director of Urban and Regional Futures at the University of Canberra, was one of the paper's authors.

"With the increasing potential for extreme events in the future, it's adding a very strong argument to again be revisiting our planning," said Professor Norman, who lost a family home in Mallacoota in the 2019-20 bushfires.

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Bushfire recovery coupled with a migration to regional areas during the pandemic means there is a significant opportunity to put in place design principles now to future-proof our communities, Professor Norman said.

"Business as usual will not work … ignoring this issue is not helping anyone," she said.
"[We can take] this opportunity to build world-class, environmentally sensitive developments."
Allowing housing to spread into areas at risk of extreme weather events will do people more harm than good in the long run, Professor Norman said.

Building houses in risky areas not only exposes people to danger, but insurance companies will continue to either increase premiums or refuse to insure properties at all.

"The really tough question of resettlement will be the next big issue, both globally and locally," Professor Norman said.

"Ignoring it and not having a discussion about this tough question would not be helping those communities.

"Leading people with fear is an awful thing to do, but sitting down and leading people in a constructive way is a very positive thing to do."

Homeowners must 'wake up very quickly'

More than 700,000 properties will be uninsurable by the end of the century, according to research. (ABC Central Coast: Jake Lapham)





After being hit by floods in 2019, residents of a Townsville housing complex were faced with a 30 per cent hike in insurance premiums.

This was after their annual insurance premium had already soared from under $30,000 to more than $150,000 in a decade.

More Australians are not only facing exorbitant insurance bills, but forecasts from Climate Risk in 2019 found that up to 720,000 Australian addresses would be in an insurance "red zone" — uninsurable — by the end of the century.

Climate Valuation is an international company operating in Australia that assesses the future risk posed to properties by climate change for potential homebuyers, as well as banks and insurers.

Insurance companies and money lenders are looking closely at climate change risk and how it will affect property values, Climate Valuation chief executive officer Karl Mallon said.

"In 2020, we did 4.5 million mortgage assessments for banks. We work in the UK, Australia and New Zealand, [so] just to be very clear, this stuff is being asked for and paid for by mortgage lenders," Dr Mallon said.
"This information is being asked for and used, and homeowners need to wake up very quickly and get on top of this."
Of the assessments they do for potential homebuyers, according to Dr Mallon, they find about 10 per cent of properties face some sort of future climate risk.
Sea level rise
Study: Up to 40 per cent of Australian beaches will go. Read more ...

That 10 per cent can be split into three categories: where measures can be put in place by the homeowner to avert the risk, where measures must be put in place by council to avert the risk, and where the risk is unavoidable, such as sea-level rise on a beachfront property.

For people who inadvertently purchase a home where there is an unavoidable future risk, they will be left with a worthless property in a few decades, Dr Mallon said.

"What we don't want is people to lose their property value through the death of a thousand cuts; that's what will happen and it's the stupidest outcome."

But there's a solution to that problem if we act now, he said.

By identifying properties that will be uninsurable or uninhabitable down the track and putting a small levy on rates now, those homeowners can be financially assisted to relocate when the time comes.

The relocation funds allocated to that property from the levy would be transferrable, meaning the house could be sold in the meantime and the relocation fund transferred to the new owner.

"[It's] basically saying, 'we're not letting you sell lemons into the market anymore,'" Dr Mallon said.

"You can provide residential zoning for say 30 or 50 years. From that point it will not be rezoned and it will be turned into mangroves or something [and] you collect rates for a transition fund … so you can move to a place up the hill.

"Everything is solvable as long as you look the problem in the eye."

As well as lenders and insurers, millennials who have grown up with climate change are increasingly factoring climate risk into their investment decisions, Dr Mallon said.

"It used to be only the council knew this stuff, and if you could get the council to shut up, no-one knew it. Now you can get a report on this stuff for a few hundred bucks.

"For those that do [get this information], they're going to make shrewd decisions and they're not going to buy stuff in at-risk areas."

'National policy needed' to stop developers passing on risk

Lenders and insurers are analysing climate risk when assessing property values. (ABC Gold Coast: Dominic Cansdale)

In their paper published in Nature Urban Sustainability today, the researchers outlined a series of guiding principles that rebuilding and development must be based upon. They are:
  • "retreating" from at-risk areas, and rebuilding in communities, rather than in isolated, scattered housing
  • creating more localised energy systems, such as renewables with local battery storage, which can reduce the risk of communities being cut off from power during extreme weather events
  • incorporating Indigenous knowledge of seasonal burning and engaging communities in ecologically oriented fire management
  • reducing energy consumption of communities through electrified public transport infrastructure, and localised services and amenities that can eliminate the need for regular long-distance travel
  • adopting passive cooling techniques in architecture, and outdoor spaces to reduce reliance on energy-intensive cooling.
But the biggest impediment to sustainable community building is the myriad conflicting interests at play in development, according to Griffith University climate change adaptation researcher Sarah Boulter.

Councils can face legal pushback from developers, as well as lost revenue, if they restrict where development can take place.

"Any time [councils] try to restrict development, they're likely to end up in the planning court," Dr Boulter said.
"For a developer, they pass that risk on. So who's responsible if you buy a place on the coast that then gets washed away? Is it the council or the developer?"
At the same time, telling people who have never experienced a natural disaster that they can't live right by the beach or in the bush is an unpopular agenda for councils to push, Dr Boulter said.

"You have to convince people that it's like insurance: you hope to never use it, but you're insuring against it happening."

On the flipside, it can be very difficult to convince people who have been recently traumatised by a bushfire or other natural disaster that they need to relocate.

Rather than putting the onus on councils to implement these measures, leadership must come in the form of a national policy framework, Dr Boulter said.

"While a lot of work happens at the grassroots community level, you've got to have some commitment at the higher level to say this is how we want our [future] communities to look," she said.

"It comes down to our leadership to say, 'we have to look at all these risks.'"

But as the risk of climate-change-related disasters have increased, there has been no unified policy to guide adaptation and mitigation, the researchers argued.

"The Australian government response to climate change since 2013 has been arguably one of systemic dismantling of action on both mitigation and adaptation," they wrote.

"As a consequence, there has been a general devolving of responsibility to the subnational level, resulting in a patchwork of initiatives rather than an integrated climate response."

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