15/03/2022

(AU The Guardian) Mayor Defends Planning Decisions ‘Made 150 Years Ago’ Amid Calls For Flood Insurance Support

The Guardian -

Home owners are being left to cover ‘catastrophic’ financial risks as the climate crisis and a legacy of poor planning coalesce, expert says


Floodwaters surrounding the town of Gympie. Gympie mayor says the commonwealth should expand its planned reinsurance pool to cover floods. Photograph: Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images

Two Queensland mayors of flood-ravaged towns on the Mary River have backed calls for the federal government to help underwrite insurance companies against future inundations.

The calls come as homeowners and small businesses brace for a potential rise in insurance premiums that could hit even those in neighbourhoods that did not flood, and push insurance out of reach for more people in those that did.

Gympie mayor Glen Hartwig and his counterpart in Maryborough, George Seymour, told Guardian Australia the commonwealth should expand its planned $10bn cyclone reinsurance pool in northern Australia to cover floods in the state’s south-east.


“The reality is that a lot of towns that have been around for a little while have to deal with the impact of decisions that were made 150 years ago on where some homes and some businesses were located,” Hartwig said.

“So, yes, assistance for individuals to deal with floods would be a good outcome.”

Set to become operational in July, the reinsurance pool effectively sees the commonwealth insure the insurance companies against huge losses if they offer disaster cover.

A federal Senate committee hearing into the reinsurance scheme last week prompted MPs from both sides of politics representing flood-affected communities to also back its expansion.

Seymour, the mayor of Fraser Coast regional council, said he hoped the government would, at the least, investigate “extending the scheme to include flooding”.

People in Brisbane also bore the brunt of policy decisions that have allowed homes to be built in areas – and with designs – that had left them at the mercy of flood waters.

Dr Di Johnson from Griffith University’s business school said it was individuals, households and small businesses who were left carrying potentially “catastrophic” financial risks while the climate crisis and a legacy of poor planning coalesce.

“When you have people who are paying premiums that are doubling or tripling in a year, then it is obviously market failure,” she said.

“That’s created a hidden cost, because it is a cost that is put on to individual citizens and particular communities, as if they were somehow at fault.”

Johnson said the reinsurance pool would be an important stepping stone toward preventing more homes from becoming uninsured.

“Frankly, if we are trying to support a viable and sustainable insurance market for natural disasters it already urgently needs to be extended – even before it has begun,” she said.

Brisbane’s lord mayor said the reinsurance pool was a matter for the federal government.

“We’re focused on Brisbane’s biggest ever clean up after the city’s biggest ever rain event,” Adrian Schrinner said.

While the Gympie mayor acknowledged that risk was “clearly being carried” by small businesses and residents, he said it was wrong to lay the blame solely at the feet of government or insurers.

“Part of the challenge we face in society is that everyone is looking to ostracise themselves from responsibility,” Hartwig said.

“If you go and buy a property that is built on a floodplain, there is the possibility that it may be inundated and you need to factor that into the sale price.”

“There is a responsibility right across the board, from the people that have purchased the property to the people that have sold it, to local governments that allowed that sort of development to occur and also insurance companies.”

Asked if their councils bear responsibility for the issue due to previous planning decisions, Schrinner said property buyers have access to “detailed information about flood risks” and can reduce the impacts of flooding, while Seymour said “all levels of government need to work together to ensure we have resilient communities”.

Suncorp and RACQ did not directly answer questions as to whether they would increase premiums as a result of the ongoing floods.

Suncorp said “high-risk locations” were being “challenged” by higher premiums as “we face worsening extreme weather”.

“In recent years, we have seen an increase in both natural hazards and reinsurance costs, which impacts premiums,” the insurer said.

But Griffith business school’s Dr Kirsten MacDonald warned homeowners could expect a new reality when their insurance was next up for renewal.

“Across the board those premiums are likely to go up, and disproportionately so in those existing flood zones, and the now-new flood zones,” MacDonald said.

“But it’s when the renewal date comes that these poor people are going to get that shock.”


However she said premium rises should not be inevitable and called on insurers to reward property owners who took action to minimise flood risk when calculating their insurance bill.

She said that houses which were raised above flood levels and constructed from materials which held up well against inundation, such as tiles and hardwoods, should pay lower premiums for insurance against flood, just as those who install extra security pay less for insurance against theft.

MacDonald also backed a broadened reinsurance pool to cover floods for areas where insurance was impossible, either because it was not available or where premiums were “at an extreme price”.

But not everyone is convinced that reinsurance pool would curtail surging home insurance premiums.

A three-year inquiry by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission produced a report in late 2020 that recommended direct subsidies as a tool for bringing down premiums rather than the reinsurance pool the Coalition ultimately adopted.

The commission found reinsurance pools supported the insurance industry rather than improved affordability.

At least one insurance consultant warned the government fund was “going to get hammered” by repeated cyclones and argued instead for relocation and redesign in the face of the climate emergency.

One point on which proponents and critics of the scheme do seem to agree however is that, alone, it will not be enough to keep disaster insurance affordable in the long run.

“Even if that reinsurance pool was extended to cover a wider definition of natural disasters, it is just a Band-Aid, stopgap solution,” Griffith University’s Johnson said.

“Risk mitigation through public infrastructure, like the flood levees, the revised building codes, better drainage, planning and, of course, action on climate change.”

“Ultimately that is going to have the most impact to effectively and sustainably reduce premiums.”

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(AU ABC) Floods, War & Climate Change

ABC Media Watch - Paul Barry

News Corp commentors outdo themselves to blame ‘militant greens’ and ‘climate change warriors’ for the deadly Australian floods and war in Europe.



Transcript


ALICE HOGG: Lismore knows floods, but this is more devastating than ever. Young, old and furry, they're all being desperately ferried to safety. But with almost a thousand calls for assistance in 24 hours, people need help quicker than it can arrive.
WOMAN: The water's still rising, my dog is stuck inside my house and it's an emergency.
- Ten News First (Sydney), 28 February, 2022

Hello, I’m Paul Barry, welcome to Media Watch. 

And in 2020 it was bushfires like we’d never seen before. In 2022 it is floods, among the worst in living memory — 22 people have lost their lives and many have lost everything they owned. 

Meanwhile, rubbish is piled up on the streets, thousands have no shelter and the damage bill will be counted in billions.  

So, just how bad was the disaster? The media were playing pick a number:

LEAH WHITE: … this flood is now set to be the worst flood in 50 years in Lismore.
- News Breakfast, ABC, 28 February, 2022

LOCAL RESIDENT: This is probably that one-in-100-year flood we’ve been warned about …
- News Breakfast, ABC, 2 March, 2022

SCOTT MORRISON: I’m advised it’s a one-in-500-year flood …
- ABC News Channel, 9 March, 2022

DOMINIC PERROTTET: This is a one-in-a-1000-year event, this event is unprecedented.
- Ten News First (Sydney), 1 March, 2022

BARNABY JOYCE: … this is a one-in-3,500-year event …
- Sunrise, Seven Network, 7 March, 2022

Yes, nearly back to Noah’s Ark. 

And in the last two weeks the news here has been full of dramatic rescues. But also of mounting anger that state and local governments and the army have not done more:

WOMAN: We need emergency housing now. Where are the mobile homes? We need them now. There are people not able to shower, there are people not able to go home, their homes are gone. Where is the New South Wales Planning Minister? This is a planning disaster!
- A Current Affair, Nine Network, 9 March, 2022

So, when the Prime Minister — who was in COVID isolation for a week — made it to Lismore last Wednesday he knew he’d be in for a rough time. 

Which is no doubt one reason why the media was not invited to tag along on his chats to locals.

The PM’s explanation later was: 

SCOTT MORRISON: … in disasters like this not everybody wants a camera shoved in their face while they’re trying to share their heart with you.
- Nine News (Sydney), 9 March, 2022

But with emotions running high, the PM was also, no doubt, trying to avoid a repeat of his unfortunate attempts to press the flesh in the 2020 bushfires:

WOMAN: I’m only shaking your hand if you give more funding to our RFS.
MAN: I don’t really want to shake your hand.
SCOTT MORRISON: Oh well, it’s nice to see you.
MAN: You won’t be getting any votes down here, buddy! You’re an idiot! You’re out, son! You are out!
MAN: Go on, get to Kirribilli! We might burn that down!
MAN: Ya scumbag!
MAN: ScuMo!
- Nine News, 2 January, 2020

So, did the PM’s ploy work? Not really.

The commercial bulletins that night re-ran the bushfire footage anyway and bookended it with the PM’s press conference — which he couldn’t avoid — where he faced a barrage of hostile questions on the community’s behalf: 

JOURNALIST: … they feel like they've been abandoned by government — state government, federal government. Do you understand why they feel that way?
JOURNALIST: … do you believe that the federal government owes the people of Lismore an apology for the response?
JOURNALIST: Where are people going to live? So we’ve got thousands of people, most of whom do not have flood insurance. They’re saying $1,000 barely gets them a bed back.
- ABC News Channel, 9 March, 2022

Inevitably, the PM was also asked whether climate change was making these disasters worse or, as the latest report from the IPCC last month found, more frequent, intense and extreme. 

And, for once, he did not try to dodge the question: 

SCOTT MORRISON: Obviously climate change is having an impact here in Australia, as it is in every country around the world.
- ABC News Channel, 9 March, 2022

And in case it wasn’t clear what he meant, Mr Morrison explained:

SCOTT MORRISON: … we are dealing with a different climate to the one we were dealing with before, I think that's just an obvious fact. And Australia is getting hard to live in because of these disasters.
- ABC News Channel, 9 March, 2022

So, was his blunt acceptance of the risks of climate change welcomed by the apologists at News Corp, who supposedly saw the light last year with this announcement?

CLIMATE OF CHANGE
MISSIONZERO

- The Courier-Mail, 11 October, 2021

Sadly not. As south-east Queensland and northern New South Wales drowned in mud, The Australian’s Chris Kenny had told readers: 

CHRIS KENNY:… they are not new; floods, droughts, fires, heatwaves and storms have always been with us and always will be, especially in this land of droughts and flooding rains.
- The Australian, 4 March, 2022

And after the PM’s press conference five days later, Kenny was saying it again on Sky:

CHRIS KENNY: … this isn’t new. We’ve always had them. We will always have them.
- The Kenny Report, Sky News Australia, 9 March, 2022

And regular commentator Liz Storer — who’s on a mission to stamp out “militant climate activism” — was loudly in agreement: 

LIZ STORER: … every time we act like these floods, these fires are new, Chris. They’ve always been synonymous with living in Australia.… this is nothing new for Australia, factually, it’s nothing new.
CHRIS KENNY: Certainly is not. I’ll grant it that at Lismore they say it’s a record flood since European settlement, that’s, that was a record. But you’re always going to get some records generally …
- The Kenny Report, Sky News Australia, 9 March, 2022

Yes, they’re only records after all. Which means they are the worst floods ever in Lismore.

Meanwhile, on the same channel 90 minutes later, Andrew Bolt was also busy dissing the link:

ANDREW BOLT: … let me now go back to this claim that we now read everywhere — this, you know, this incredible rain, these record floods, obviously caused by global warming …
So, what is the truth? Has global warming actually made these floods worse …?
- The Bolt Report, Sky News Australia, 9 March, 2022

Answer no, according to Bolt and his guest William Kininmonth, a long-time climate sceptic.

And other Sky News hosts and guests had also been denying the connection between climate change and extreme weather events, just as they did when the bushfires struck two years ago:

CHRIS SMITH: Well now we’ve got the climate change warriors using these disasters to blame a warming planet and CO2 emissions. Horrible timing. And yet the greenest of scientists maintain you simply cannot link climate change to individual disasters.
- Credlin, Sky News Australia, 4 March, 2022 

PAULINE HANSON: We’ve always had this, these bushfires, we’ve always had flooding and to blame it on climate change, CO2, Nicholas, is a load of bloody BS.
MATT CANAVAN: … every time there’s a natural disaster we then link it back to climate change …We just link one thing with another without any kind of logical framework or proper science …
- Paul Murray Live, Sky News Australia, 7 March, 2022

But some Sky hosts went even further than that. Saying climate change was not to blame for the floods. But climate activists were:

GARY HARDGRAVE: … we’re suffering these floods, all up and down the east coast, not because of climate change — even though the Queensland Premier has said ‘it’s climate change you know’ — it’s actually because of deliberate green inertia. … and it's all because of these militant greens …
- Hardgrave, Sky News Australia, 4 March, 2022

Who, says Gary Hardgrave, have stopped Australia building dams for flood control. 

And in News Corp’s Courier-Mail, another Sky pundit was echoing that claim: 

If ever we needed proof that Labor-Greens lunacy is hurting Australia, take a look at the South East Queensland floods.
- The Courier-Mail, 2 March, 2022

But on Sky’s Outsiders, Rowan Dean was going even further than that, claiming it’s not just the floods you can blame on climate activists, it’s the war in Ukraine as well:

ROWAN DEAN: If you destroy your cheap, affordable energy, you’re not only disarm yourself, you invite aggression from those who have not destroyed their own energy supplies.
- Outsiders, Sky News Australia, 27 February, 2022

And on yesterday’s Outsiders, co-host James Morrow dialled it up to 11:

JAMES MORROW: … the West has deliberately weakened itself with green ideology for the past 20, 30 years since the Cold War and, you know, you have to say that the Greta Thunbergs of the world are just as responsible for this conflict as anybody else.
ROWAN DEAN: Well, I think more responsible …
- Outsiders, Sky News Australia, 13 March, 2022

And in the News Corp papers, others like Andrew Bolt were making similar accusations: 

Here come the vultures again. Green journalists are exploiting these floods to push the global warming scam that makes us so weak – and Russia and China strong.
- Herald Sun, 3 March, 2022

As was Matt Canavan in The Australian:

This deluded agenda, championed by a Swedish teenager, has weakened the industrial strength of the free world, and that has only encouraged bullies like Putin.
- The Australian, 9 March, 2022

And Miranda Devine in the Daily Tele:

No wonder Putin regards the West as so decadent and weak that he could stroll into Ukraine with impunity.
- The Daily Telegraph, 8 March, 2022

It is amazing, isn’t it?

Whether it’s floods, bushfires, invasions or war crimes, this mob can spin anything into a culture war.

There may well be some truth in what they say: Australia is a land of fire and flood, building more dams might help in flood control, and reliance on Russian gas has made it harder for Europe to punish Putin’s aggression.

But to blame floods and war on those who want to reduce global warming is not just ridiculous, it’s a cynical perversion of the truth. 

And not for the first time.

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(AU Saturday Paper) How Climate Change Is Impacting Health In Australia

Saturday Paper - Annabelle Warren

From the Black Summer bushfires to the extreme flooding in Queensland and New South Wales, the hidden aspect of climate change is its enormous impact on health.

Mallacoota evacuees on a landing craft head to the MV Sycamore in January 2020. Credit: Shane Cameron / Defence

Author
Annabelle Warren is an endocrinologist in Melbourne.
Veronique Hamilton is a mental-health nurse working in the Latrobe Valley.

Last June, the region experienced severe storms that led to widespread damage, flooding and power outages. Floodwaters shut down the Yallourn coal-fired power station. It was the busiest 24 hours in the history of the Victorian State Emergency Service.

Hamilton recalls supporting a friend who was heavily pregnant and cut off from hospital access by floodwaters. “She arranged for a neighbour who is a midwife to be available in case she went into labour,” she says. “After delivery, she received messages about water contamination – it was so stressful for her.”

Just this week there has been more record flooding across Queensland and New South Wales, with massive displacement, deaths, damage and recovery that could take months. In areas near Brisbane a year’s worth of rain was recorded within just a week.

Simon Judkins is a senior emergency doctor who was part of the response team deployed to east Gippsland in Victoria in the aftermath of the Black Summer bushfires in late 2019, which contributed to 417 deaths across Australia. Homes and forests were destroyed as 4000 Mallacoota residents and holidaymakers fled to the shoreline to escape the flames.

“For days all you could see was thick smoke or bright red sky,” Judkins recalls. “Parents had been on holiday with their newborn babies, celebrating their first Christmas with the grandparents, and two days later they were in the health centre in tears, worrying for the health of their child.”

Immediate health impacts included smoke inhalation, asthma exacerbations and heart attacks. Roads were closed and ambulance helicopters were unable to land. Transporting patients for urgent care was impossible. “What stood out for me,” Judkins says, “was the fear in parents’ faces – a total lack of control.” Now, two years later, “there will be people still having nightmares, who haven’t got their homes or livelihoods back”.

Paul Yates is a specialist geriatrician who was spurred to research the effects of heat on health after witnessing the impacts of the record-breaking 2009 Victorian heatwave. “I was struck by the high number of older, vulnerable people who needed hospital care as a direct result of the heat.” In Melbourne during the past 20 years “extreme temperature events” have increased by 10 per cent each year.

His research has found that deaths and emergency department presentations in older Australians were 15 per cent more frequent on extreme heat days at Melbourne hospitals. In raw numbers, that’s nine or 10 extra ambulances arriving every hot night.

The health impacts of the climate crisis are not theoretical, future concerns: they are being seen in our hospitals and clinics here and now. Even in the context of Covid-19, the World Health Organization has declared climate change the biggest health threat facing humanity. Heatwaves, bushfires, floods and cyclones demand an immediate emergency response. Mental health anguish and chronic health complications of displacement follow.

At current rates of climate collapse, water and food security will be under threat and patterns of infectious diseases will change, with tropical diseases such as malaria likely to extend into Australia.

This year we have had cases of deadly Japanese encephalitis, previously only seen in tropical Queensland and the Northern Territory, as far south as Victoria. Like most things, climate-related diseases disproportionately affect the most vulnerable in our community – the very old and young, those with chronic health conditions, and the poor and marginalised.

Burning coal for electricity is responsible for 30 per cent of Australia’s carbon emissions. It is our leading contributor to the climate crisis. Coal also creates massive air pollution, estimated to kill 785 Australians every year, to cause asthma symptoms in an extra 14,434 children, and to cause 845 babies to be born with low birth weight.

The annual cost to Australia from mortality related to air pollution is estimated at up to $24.3 billion. Furthermore, ash from coal burning contains heavy metals such as mercury and is dumped in poorly maintained dams with a track record of spills. It is residents of the Latrobe and Hunter valleys who are most affected, and who deserve a just transition to new clean industries to protect their health and financial futures.

Many of Hamilton’s clients at the Gippsland practices where she works are young people concerned about climate. “They have a dark and dismal outlook on life,” she says. “Usually working with anxiety you can do exposure therapy and find more helpful ways of looking at things, but it’s difficult when so much of it is based in reality. How do you get over a fear when the science says we do need to be scared?”

New ways of thinking about “eco-anxiety” have likened it to a form of “pre-traumatic stress disorder” – dread in the face of what is to come. Hamilton shares her clients’ concerns: “I myself decided to only have one child due to the impacts of climate change. It terrifies me to think about the future my child is going to face.”

In the Latrobe Valley, a lack of honest leadership around the future of coal and coal workers’ livelihoods contributes to stress.

“We know uncertainty is bad for mental health. To have good mental health we need to have a sense of control and agency over our lives,” Hamilton says. “The Latrobe Valley has high rates of mental ill health, domestic violence and suicide. We can’t afford rushed and overdue coal closures. The whole world knows coal is on the way out – Loy Yang [coal-fired power station] isn’t going to run until 2045. We know that.”

Coal and gas have served their purpose and are now a hazard. They are the new tobacco. We’ve been addicted and now we need to quit for our health. In our homes and increasingly in heavy industry, everything that coal and gas can do can be done better by renewable electricity – from solar, wind and batteries.

For Judkins, the connection between coal burning and emergency presentations is clear. “Every climate scientist predicted this 20 years ago,” he says. Ongoing inaction and support for the fossil fuel industry is a slap in the face. “These are multinational companies making billions of dollars, getting government subsidies and not paying tax. How is that fair to the people whose lives are being turned upside down by climate-induced disasters?”

Hamilton’s call to action is this: “We know climate change is here. We need to have open conversations around climate change, acknowledge this is happening and create more resilient communities to prepare for natural disasters. The more prepared and in control people feel, the less likely they are to have mental health impacts after events occur. Fossil fuel companies and the government need to stop passing the buck and work together to create a transition plan away from coal.”

As health professionals, we are on the front line. We will not ignore the threat of climate change to our patients and communities. We are experts in assessing threats to human safety and determining the most effective intervention – and that’s quitting coal.

This is why the World Health Organization has joined the United Nations to call for an exit from coal by 2030 in developed nations. More than 600 healthcare workers – nurses, doctors, allied health, psychologists and beyond – have signed an open letter from Healthy Futures calling for Australia’s largest polluter, AGL, to switch from coal to renewable electricity by 2030.

Ten of Australia’s peak medical bodies, representing 90,000 doctors, have endorsed an urgent transition away from coal and gas to renewable energy across all sectors, and called for a national climate change and health strategy to co-ordinate health-specific climate adaptation and mitigation.

Coal is a rock of solid carbon. There is truly no better form of carbon capture, or storage, than not digging it up and setting it on fire. Last week’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report confirms the window of opportunity for action is rapidly closing.

As individuals, communities, businesses and governments, we need to act urgently. If coal and gas burning continues beyond 2030, we will all suffer the consequences.

With Paul Yates, Veronique Hamilton and Simon Judkins.

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