23/08/2021

(AU ABC) Climate Change Means More Floods, Fires And Heatwaves. Some Communities Are Already Adapting

ABC Radio National - Cathy Van Extel

Queensland's Logan City has been recognised for its urban greening efforts, including planting more trees. (Supplied: Logan City Council)

Climate scientists have warned Australia that it must pick up the pace on its climate adaptation efforts.

The latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, described as a "code red" for humanity, has forecast global warming will likely hit 1.5 degrees Celsius by about 2035 if nothing changes.

However, Australia's land areas have already warmed by about 1.4C since 1910, according to the report.

IPCC vice chairman and director of the Australian National University Climate Change Institute Mark Howden says adaptation needs a greater focus.

"We are actually heading towards this very, very quickly and we do really need to start thinking and considering ... action, not just in terms of emission reduction but also in terms of adaptation for those futures we can't avoid at this point."

IPCC report and Australia

The IPCC defines adaptation as "the process of adjustment to actual or expected climate and its effects". The goal is to take steps to protect communities and reduce their vulnerability to the harmful effects of climate change.

There is concern Australia is well behind in its efforts to adapt to the effects of more intense and frequent weather events, according to Sarah Boulter, associate professor in Climate Adaptation at the University of Tasmania.

"There's been a lot of discussion about where climate change is going and where our responsibilities lie in terms of mitigation and it has put a bit of a shadow over the ability to think clearly around adaptation," she says.

There are signs of a shift though. "In the past 12 to 18 months, there really has been, certainly at the federal level, a real effort to start changing that conversation," she says.

Indeed the federal government is currently developing a new National Climate Resilience and Adaptation Strategy ahead of the Glasgow Climate Summit, which begins in late October.

But Professor Boulter says the IPCC report has made it clear that it's time to act.
"The longer time goes on, the harder it becomes to decide what it is we're going to do and how much work we have to do.
"So I think for Australia we are really at a critical point, we need to start getting on the ground and taking some action."

So who's thinking ahead and taking action? Across the country, there are many interesting and innovative approaches to adaptation already underway.

Thinking outside the box

Heavy rainfall, river floods and bushfires are projected to worsen across Australia.

In March 2021, New South Wales experienced its worst flooding in six decades.

On the NSW Mid North Coast, elderly residents at the Dunbogan Caravan Park were stranded by floodwaters rising faster and higher than expected.

Elderly residents at NSW's Dunbogan Caravan Park were stranded by floodwaters in March 2021. (Supplied: Ritchie Villages)

And in 2019 many of those residents, most of whom are vulnerable pensioners, were forced to evacuate as bushfires narrowly missed the caravan park.

Owner Cicely Sylow has engaged an architect and engineers to design a unique fire-resistant floating home that could replace the current mobile buildings in the caravan park.

"We have really elderly people who don't want to be in homes that are 3 metres above the ground given the amount of stairs you would need to climb to get into your home every day," she says.

"So we are looking at a home that could be .... close to ground level that could respond to a flood event by floating ... and would be constructed with bushfire resistant materials and design."

James Davidson, from climate adaptation architectural firm JDA Co, is looking at ways to float the cheap, portable homes found in caravan parks that are not typically flood resilient.

Architects are trialing a floating home that could be installed at Dunbogan Caravan Park in NSW. (Supplied: Ritchie Villages)

"The idea is not to allow people to stay during a flood, they've got to evacuate — but if they do get caught, then hopefully they will be safe."

Davidson was inspired by floating portable homes on the Mississippi River in the US.

"It's been done before so it's not a totally crazy idea. We've just got to get the engineering right."

Innovative ideas like this can make a big difference, according to Professor Boulter.

"There's always that question of whether we should be living in certain places or not, but there are certainly some building design things that can be done to manage the risks from extreme events," she says.

Investor concern

Brisbane Airport's second runway, which opened last year, was one of the largest aviation construction projects undertaken in Australia.

Brisbane Airport's new runway was built with climate adaptation in mind. (Supplied: Brisbane Airport)
Like most of the nation's airports, it is based on the coast and is highly vulnerable to the effects of climate change, including sea level rise, storm surge, inundation and rising temperatures.

Accordingly, the new runway was built 1.5 metres above the minimum regulatory requirements, channels were designed to reduce tidal flooding, and a seawall was constructed to buffer large waves.

Brisbane Airport Corporation (BAC) project director Paul Coughlan, who oversaw the construction of the $1.1 billion second runway, says climate adaptation was incorporated into the design from the outset.

"For our board, climate change adaptation was a really critical requirement ...  I can't remember how many times I had to brief them and really convince them that their investment [was] a good investment," he says.

Now BAC is assessing its older airport infrastructure, while the implementation of the climate adaptation work has attracted interest from other domestic and international airports.

Professor Boulter says the design life of most transport infrastructure — airports, ports, roads, rail and bridges — will be impacted by climate change.

"If it was meant to last for 80 years, under increasing climate change it might only be fit for purpose for 60 years," she says.

"There's an economic problem then." 

Green cities

Climate change is making heatwaves longer, hotter and more likely. They are also becoming more dangerous.

According to the Green Building Council of Australia (GBCA), heat stress kills more Australians than all other natural disasters combined.

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For example, in the 2009 heatwave in South Australia and Victoria, 500 deaths during that period were attributed to heat stress. One of the key ways to counter the effects of climate change and make our cities more liveable as temperatures rise is through urban greening, says GBCA chief executive Davina Rooney.

She points to studies in Western Sydney that show that having more trees in a street can lead to temperatures 10C lower.

Professor Boulter agrees. She says finding new ways for urban areas to stay cool is a critical part of how we adapt to extreme temperatures.

Queensland's Logan City, south of Brisbane, has been recognised for its urban greening efforts. They increased the city's tree canopy by 12 per cent, going from 41 per cent in 2016 to 53 per cent in 2020. 

Brisbane's Urban Forest is a high rise apartment block covered in native plants. (Supplied: Aria Property)

Deputy Mayor Jon Raven says the city has made climate resilience a priority.

"The way the community sees that is by more tree canopy, more trees planted and having an environment which feels natural and welcoming, rather than just being a concrete heat sink," he says.

Sydney company Junglefy is famous for its breathing walls and rooftop gardens, both great examples of urban greening.

Owner Jock Gammon explains that plants can reduce the urban heat island effect — in which hard surfaces absorb heat during the day and release it in the evening.

"It requires a lot of energy to cool that air back down, and typically our cities are four to seven degrees hotter than the surrounding bushland," he says.

"The plants stop those hard surfaces from heating up and they also release moisture.

"If you think of those leafy suburbs, they are always cooler and more inviting than some of those newer suburbs that don't have that green canopy."

Logan City has been recognised for its urban greening efforts including numerous tree plantings. (Supplied: Logan City Council)

There are other good examples, says Rooney, including Brisbane's Urban Forest project which will plant 1,000 trees and 20,000 native plants, and a plan by City of Melbourne to plant 3,000 street trees with an aim to lower the temperature by 4C.  

"But there's a huge opportunity for us to increase the number of trees," she says.

Protecting coastal communities

Australia's 36,000 kilometre of coastline is home to the vast majority of the population. It's also under threat from climate change.

The Australian Coastal Councils Association (ACCA), which has 200 members, is calling for a coordinated national approach to managing the impacts of rising sea levels, extreme weather events, storm surges and riverine flooding.

Coastal properties, like the Bowen Golf Course, are tackling the threat of rising sea levels. (Supplied: Whitsundays Climate Change Innovation Hub)

In a recent member survey, 90 per cent of the 100 respondents had been impacted by coastal erosion hazards in the past five years.

ACCA chief executive Alan Stokes says coastal management is largely being left to local councils — the least resourced of all levels of government — and some are struggling. 

"We heard of one small council in South Australia that was spending more than 30 per cent of its budget on coastal management. Now that's just unsustainable," he says.

For some communities, the only option will be a managed retreat, one of the few adaptation responses available. 

Retreat is an emotionally charged and politically difficult option. It also raises vexed questions of who pays.

The small Tasmanian beach town of Snug, 30 kilometres south of Hobart, is facing such a prospect.

The Tasmanian community of Snug may need to investigate a managed retreat as sea levels rise. (Supplied: Kingborough Council)

Kingborough Council environmental manager Jon Doole says modelling predicts the area will be inundated by 2100 and difficult decisions will have to be made.

"What we've got to work out is what may be the future of those houses [under threat]. Can they be protected or do we need to think about retreat?" he says.

He says the community will need to be consulted about the risk it faces. It will be a difficult but important conversation. 

"In the upcoming year for Snug, we're really hopeful that we will get a grant that we've applied for that will really help us put more resources into having community forums."

Professor Boulter says there has been a lot of good planning by councils but there is only so much that can be done to preserve the coastline.

"If we want to protect our coastline, then we have to make decisions that are very expensive and are also likely to change [its] character," she says.

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(AU ABC) The Councils Leading The Charge On Climate Change To Reach Net Zero Emissions By 2030

ABC NewsClaire Moodie

Town of Victoria Park mayor Karen Vernon says the council is committed to achieving net zero emissions by 2030. (Supplied: Town of Victoria Park)



Key Points
  • Local councils have taken the fight against climate change into their own hands
  • But they want financial help to prevent passing the cost on to ratepayers
  • Australia's peak local government body is lobbying for a $200 million war chest to help lower emissions
As the climate wars drag on at a federal level, local councils across the country are taking the initiative and doing it for themselves. 

Local governments, best known for the three "Rs" of roads, rates and rubbish, are adding a fourth "R" to the list – risk from climate change.

More than 100 councils across the country have declared a climate emergency, while dozens more are investing in renewables and setting ambitious targets for cutting emissions.

"Our community has been telling us this for a long time, they want to take action on climate change," said Karen Vernon, the mayor of Victoria Park, a small local authority bordering Perth's Swan River.
"Everyone has to take action on climate change, and we've got to do it together. 
"It can't just be left to one level of government."

Councils take lead on climate

In a video to ratepayers on the council's Facebook site, the mayor stands on the roof of the council's headquarters, surrounded by 250 solar panels, announcing a new climate emergency plan.

"This is a blueprint for how our council, as an organisation, will get to net zero emissions by 2030," Cr Vernon told the ABC.

The battle is already well underway, not just to cut the council's footprint but to encourage residents to get onboard for the journey.

Victoria Park mayor Karen Vernon says the council has set a target to double the number of trees in the area. (Supplied: Town of Victoria Park)

The community is being urged to help double the town's "tree canopy" to cool down the streets at the height of summer, as well as capture carbon.

The council has pledged to hit its target — as much as possible — by what's called "direct action" rather than relying on carbon offsets.

Even for this small council, the predicted impacts of climate change – more extreme heat, bushfire and floods – are a major concern.

The Town of Victoria Park is one of 103 councils nationwide that have declared a climate emergency. (Supplied: Town of Victoria Park)

"We've got over six kilometres of Swan River frontage so it's really important that we manage that, because rising sea levels is another indicator of climate change," Cr Vernon said.

A few kilometres up the road, at the City of Canning in Perth's southern suburbs, the council has teamed up with the operators of a data-driven app to educate residents on how to measure and reduce their emissions.

Councils are trying to educate residents on how to reduce their household footprint. (ABC News: Claire Moodie)

Household emissions are said to make up around one-fifth of Australia's total. 

The City of Canning is one of 28 councils across Australia which have partnered with the app program, according to its founder Vanessa Rauland.

"The average footprint of a household is around 15 tonnes [of greenhouse gases]," Ms Rauland said.

Vanessa Rauland says councils are using her company’s app to measure the impact of their low carbon projects. (ABC News: Claire Moodie)

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"But there are so many things you can do to reduce your emissions.

"I think it's super encouraging seeing how many councils are really stepping up and taking the lead on climate action."

It is nearly five years since Darebin City council in Melbourne became the first in the world to declare a climate emergency.

Since then, Darebin has become certified as carbon neutral.

This year,  it struck a deal to collaborate with 45 other Victorian councils to source all its power from wind energy.

"Effectively, it's the same as taking 90,000 cars off the road or about 45,000 houses off the fossil fuel grid,"  said Darebin councillor Trent McCarthy, who led the council to declare the climate emergency back in 2016.

Councils need financial help to avoid passing costs on to ratepayers

But not all climate-conscious councils are opting to join the emergency declaration movement.

City of Canning mayor Patrick Hall says councils could do with more government support to become carbon neutral. (ABC News: Claire Moodie)

City of Canning mayor Patrick Hall said the council had been working behind the scenes to reach a target of net zero by 2030.
"We don't feel it's our role to be declaring a climate emergency, we let others work in that space," he said.
The mayor said the local authority was already saving 350 tonnes of greenhouse gases per year through investing in solar at 12 of its council buildings, among other low-carbon projects.

But Cr Hall said the council would need more support to meet the massive upfront costs of some of the measures, including changing nearly 9000 street lights around the suburbs to energy-efficient LED lamps.

"Now if we changed those over to LED, and we hope to do that at some stage, it would save us more than $400,000 a year by year 4," he said.

The federal and state governments offer grants to councils to change their street lighting to LED, slashing power costs and CO2 emissions. (ABC News: Armin Azad)

"It's an enormous saving — not only to the community, but for the environment — but we simply can't fund it by ourselves."

It is believed many councils — especially small, regional local authorities — will need significant financial help to become carbon neutral, without passing the cost on to ratepayers. 

The Australian Local Government Association wants a $200 million federal fund over four years to help more of the country's 537 councils adapt to climate change.

The Town of Victoria Park says tree planting is a big part of its strategy to achieve net zero by 2030. (Supplied: Town of Victoria Park)

Karen Vernon of the Town of Victoria Park said the council had estimated that it would cost around $8 million to become carbon neutral by 2030.
"I wouldn't like people to think that us addressing a climate emergency is something that only comes at a cost of higher rates," she said.
"I believe it doesn't have to…we just need to be innovative and agile about how we do it.

"As time goes by there will be new innovations that we can look to adopt that will hopefully drive even greater efficiencies in how we deliver our climate emergency plan."

The WA Government offers grants to councils to upgrade their street lights to LED. (ABC News: Armin Azad)

As more councils set targets to lower their emissions, there is a push for greater leadership and support from the state and federal governments.

Portia Odell is director of the Cities Power Partnership, a coalition of 147 councils nationwide who are committed to climate action.

"Councils would really like to see the federal government step up, implement strong climate policy and really super-charge local action, unlock funding and drive new investment," Ms Odell said.

Call for WA government to partner with councils on clean energy projects

That investment would be money well spent according to Brad Pettitt, a WA Greens MP who was previously the mayor of Fremantle — a council that became carbon neutral a decade ago.

"We've seen local governments take the leadership on climate change in a way that state and federal governments can't, partly because local government is not mired in party politics," he said. 

"It's actually about local communities getting on and doing things."

Greens MP and former Fremantle mayor Brad Pettitt says the state government needs to support local councils to curb their emissions. (ABC News: Claire Moodie)

WA government agencies do offer grants to local councils for a range of climate action measures including tree planting, making street lighting more energy-efficient and reducing waste to landfill.

But Mr Pettitt said both the state and federal governments needed to do far more by partnering with councils on clean energy projects.

"We've seen in Fremantle the investments in clean energy, we've actually seen our electricity costs come down so whilst there is that initial upfront cost, the pay back is really quick, just a number of years," he said.
"It brings down costs for ratepayers, reduces our carbon emissions, it's a win-win."
The West Australian Local Government Association (WALGA) says LGAs representing 93 per cent of the state's population have committed to taking at least one significant action to address climate change.

"There are two key hurdles local governments face," said WALGA president Tracey Roberts.

"[They are] lack of resources to take action — especially for small local governments in the regions — and lack of knowledge, skills and expertise to address the challenges of climate change."

Among many other initiatives, WALGA is lobbying for funding to plant 600,000 trees at a cost of $20 million.

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(AU ABC) Australian Frogs Are On The Brink Of Extinction, And Four Species Likely Already Lost, Scientists Say

ABC Science - Jo Khan

The Baw Baw frog of Victoria's central highlands will likely go extinct in the next 20 years, new research shows. (Supplied: Damian Goodall)


Key Points
  • Eight Australian frog species are at "high risk" of becoming extinct in the next 20 years
  • Chytrid fungal disease, climate change, and invasive species are behind the decline
  • Creating safe refuges for frogs in the wild and captive breeding are key to averting more species loss
Australian frogs are being pushed towards the precipice of extinction by disease, climate change and invasive animals.

A team of 29 scientists from across Australia has warned that a number of frog species will go extinct in the next two decades if no action is taken. 

Eight species are at "high risk" of extinction in the next 20 years, but four of those are likely to be already lost, according to the research published in the journal Pacific Conservation Biology today. 

The study ranked the extinction probability for Australia's threatened frogs to identify the species most in need of intervention, according to study author Graeme Gillespie of the Northern Territory Department of Environment, Parks and Water Security.

Dr Gillespie said frogs would soon follow the path of Australian reptiles, mammals, birds and plants that have already become extinct, adding to the country's already dire biodiversity record
"The evidence is there, the patterns are there, this study tells us we're about to lose more," he said.
The study's lead author, Hayley Geyle of the NESP Threatened Species Recovery Hub, said urgent action was needed to protect these unique species.

"Current resourcing and management is just not cutting it in terms of preventing declines," she said.

Disease causing extinction

A small, mottled brown frog is on a grey rock covered in moss and lichen.
The northern tinker frog normally inhabits montane rainforest in the wet tropics of Queensland, but is thought to already be extinct. (Supplied: Hal Cogger)





The amphibian disease chytridiomycosis (or chrytrid), caused by the fungal skin pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis,has likely already driven four species extinct, according to Dr Gillespie.

"This disease has been responsible for the extinction of hundreds of species of frogs around the world, including in Australia, and the decline of many others," he said.

"For the species which we believe are extinct, chytrid is probably the exclusive factor."

But for many of our other critically endangered frogs, the threats of climate change, invasive species and habitat loss are also at play.

"What these things do is they reduce the overall resilience of the species to cope with a new threat," Dr Gillespie said.

"If a frog occurs on one mountaintop like Kosciuszko, there is a chance for the entire species to be knocked out by one event like a fire."

A green and brown frog with yellow spots on its legs is on a red rock at night.
Scientists believe the yellow-spotted tree frog has likely already been wiped out by chytrid. (Supplied: David Hunter)
Species Likely Extinct
  • Northern tinker frog, Taudactylus rheophilus, QLD.
  • Northern gastric-brooding frog, Rheobatrachus vitellinus, QLD.
  • Mountain mist frog, Litoria nyakalensis, QLD.
  • Yellow-spotted tree frog, Litoria castanea, NSW/ACT.
Climate change may be impacting lowland frog species too, according to Ed Meyer of the Queensland Frog Society, who has been involved in monitoring frogs in groundwater dependent wetlands.

"We think the rainfall deficits we've had in south-east Queensland have resulted in the local extirpation of populations of some of those species," Dr Meyer said.

Dr Meyer said the study clarified just how dire the situation was for a large number of Australian frogs.

"We risk losing additional species in a very short time space, perhaps shorter than people realise," said Dr Meyer, who was not one of the authors.

Disparity in frog conservation investment

After the Black Summer bush fires tore across Mt Kosciuszko in 2019/20, a rescue mission was launched to see how the critically endangered southern corroboree frogs had fared in their protected enclosures in the alpine bogs.

Several enclosures were destroyed and close to two-thirds of the frogs died, but scientists hope frog numbers could bounce back thanks to an extensive captive breeding program for the species.

a black and yellow striped frog walks on a gloved hand
The southern corroboree frog has decades of research and an extensive captive breeding program behind it. (ABC North Queensland: Sophie Kesteven)

But there isn't adequate data on the ecology or populations of many other frog species at risk of extinction, let alone captive management programs.

"There's definitely a big disparity in those frogs on the list in terms of the amount of investment that's gone into securing their future," Ms Geyle said.

"So one of the key actions would be to put in place more research and monitoring of the populations."

Dr Meyer agreed that because some species receive more attention than others, we don't have a good understanding of their vulnerability to threats.
"We perhaps don't appreciate just how how much of a knife edge they're on, until they fall over the other side," he said.
Captive breeding challenges

Even for species that do have captive management programs underway, their release into the wild is not immediately guaranteed.

The Kroombit tinker frog that lives in rainforest streams in central Queensland is the species most likely to go extinct by 2040 according to the new study, after the four species already believed to have disappeared. 

Dr Meyer has been studying the frog since the mid 1990s and has witnessed its decline in the wild.

A dark grey froglet - which has just metamorphosed from a tadpole - looking very cute on some teeny, tiny pebbles
This is the first metamorphosed Kroombit tinker frog in captivity after almost two decades of trying. (Supplied: Mik Vella)

He said his team faced political and funding challenges when they set up a captive breeding program for the Kroombit tinker frog 13 years ago, but they've now successfully bred the frog in captivity.
"We're currently putting together a formal captive release plan strategy to make sure that we get [the release] right," he said.

"We're going to give it a red-hot go and hopefully we can buy the species some time and maybe give it a brighter future."

Play Audio. Duration: 1 hour 9 minutes 26 seconds
A midnight frog chorus in
Wadawarrung Country in Victoria
1h 9m
Captive breeding programs are expensive, time-consuming and the last resort, said Dr Gillespie, but there are other things that can be done.

"We can build resilience in these species by addressing management issues that we do have some control over," he said.

"In some cases, it's just a matter of putting in appropriate fencing or undertaking appropriate pest management.

"We know how to control pigs. It's not technologically very difficult."

Relocating frogs to safer habitats or even wild refuges is another potential solution.


A mottled light grey and brown frog is on a red-brown rock The armoured mist frog was thought to be extinct until it was rediscovered in 2008, and has been translocated into an area free from chytrid fungus. (Supplied: Conrad Hoskin)

Dr Gillespie also thinks crisis funding for threatened species could be put to better use.

"If the resources that were being thrown around in response to those [2019] fires had been spread out uniformly over the previous 10 years, we would've had a better outcome," he said.

"We would have been more informed about the likely impacts, and there would have been more resilience in the system.

"But a big bag of money gets thrown at it, it gets spent in a short period of time, and then it goes back down to being inadequate until the next crisis."

A spokesperson for the federal environment department said they welcomed the research findings, and that the government was committed to recovering threatened species.

They said government programs were "increasingly incorporating monitoring for on-ground projects to better assess the outcomes of Australian government investment and to inform future actions".

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