Climate change will cost Australia’s economy hundreds of billions of dollars in coming decades, driven by loss of life and physical damage caused by heatwaves, droughts, floods, fires and other natural disasters, according to the United Nation’s report compiled by the world’s climate scientists.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report on the impacts of climate change makes “conservative estimates” for the economic cost of global warming.
It said 1 degree warming would cause a loss of 0.3 per cent of GDP a year, 2 degrees would cost 0.6 per cent of growth a year and 3 degrees would decrease growth by 1.1 per cent a year.
Lismore in northern NSW is being hit with the worst flood
ever recorded. Credit: Elise Derwin |
Under 3 degrees warming, the economy would lose $200 million in potential earnings by 2032 and $600 billion by 2042.
The world has already heated by 1.1 degrees and Australia’s land mass has warmed by an average of 1.4 degrees since 1910, according to the CSIRO.
Climate policy |
If the rest of the world followed Australia’s current commitments and policies, global warming would exceed 3 degrees, according to Climate Action Tracker.
Greenhouse gases retain heat in the atmosphere, adding to the energy that drives weather events – making droughts, cyclones, fires and floods more frequent, intense and unpredictable.
Unprecedented floods are sweeping down the North Coast of NSW, after Brisbane was inundated last week, just two years after the most intense drought on record in many parts of the eastern seaboard.
General manager of natural disaster consultancy Risk Frontiers, Andrew Gissing, said Lismore was exceeding record flood heights set in 1974 and 1954 by a significant margin, with forecast peaks that have an annual average chance of about 0.2 per cent of occurring.
Emissions
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Even if the earth’s heating is kept at under 2 degrees, the number of heatwave-related deaths in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane will more than double to an average of 300 year by 2080, under current population growth.
This scenario would also see the mercury top 50 degrees in extreme events in these cities, and the frequency of days topping 35 degrees will rise between 25 per cent and 85 per cent depending on the location around the country.
Agriculture across the country is expected to suffer major financial stress as the atmosphere heats, although financial impacts are hard to forecast due to shifting growing zones, adaptive livestock and plant breeding, and advances in drought adaptation.
The Murray Darling Basin is home to 2.4 million people and agricultural production is worth an annual average of $2.6 billion.
The river system is already struggling with over-extraction for irrigation and the report highlighted findings from the CSIRO that 2 degrees of warming would reduce streamflows by 20 per cent.
Reduction in long-term average inflows to the River Murray
Source: Australian government |
“Any further delay in concerted global action will miss a brief and rapidly closing window to secure a liveable future.”
United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres reiterated his plea for the world to reverse the current trend and cut greenhouse emissions in a last-ditch hope of limiting global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees.
“Science tells us that will require the world to cut emissions by 45 per cent by 2030 and achieve net zero emissions by 2050,” he said. “But according to current commitments, global emissions are set to increase almost 14 per cent over the current decade.
Key risks identified for Australia
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Links
- (IPCC Report) Climate Change 2022: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability
- What is the IPCC climate change report – and what does it say?
- The IPCC Climate Change 2022 Impacts Report: Why it matters
- Explainer: As climate change wreaks havoc globally, IPCC report flags ways to adapt
- IPCC report, 2022: Red alert on climate change vulnerability and adaptation limitation
- (AU The Conversation) New IPCC Report Shows Australia Is At Real Risk From Climate Change, With Impacts Worsening, Future Risks High, And Wide-Ranging Adaptation Needed
- (UN The Guardian) IPCC Issues ‘Bleakest Warning Yet’ On Impacts Of Climate Breakdown
- This climate crisis report asks: what is at stake? In short, everything
- (UN The Conversation) Transformational Change Is Coming To How People Live On Earth, UN Climate Adaptation Report Warns: Which Path Will Humanity Choose?
- (USA PBS NewsHour) UN Releases Dire Climate Report Highlighting Rapid Environmental Degradation
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