16/03/2022

(QLD BBC) Australia Floods: 'I'm Angry It's Happening Again'

BBC News - Simon Atkinson

In the past two weeks, floods in eastern Australia have killed at least 21 people. Thousands of homes have been left uninhabitable by one of Australia's worst natural disasters.

Sophia Walter with flood-damaged items on her Brisbane street.

Wading through filthy, waist-high floodwaters to escape her apartment, Sophia Walter says her first emotion wasn't fear. It was fury.

"What I felt was a real anger. Anger that this was happening again."

In January 2011, Ms Walter watched "the hill I lived on turn into an island" as Brisbane suffered floods described as a once-in-a-century event.

"I remember thinking to myself, well at least I've gotten it out of the way."

Barely a decade on, she is standing among mountains of abandoned furniture, destroyed electricals and sodden toys, all dumped on the footpath.

A "rain bomb" of intense downpours saw the city's overflowing river and creeks cause billions of dollars of damage. At least five people in Brisbane have died.

Grim warnings

With impeccable timing, as cars were being submerged, homes inundated and ferry pontoons cascaded wildly downstream, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was publishing its latest update on the state of the planet.

Among its many grim warnings: extreme rainfall (as well as droughts and bushfires) will become more and more common. And the window of opportunity to act is closing fast.

"There's no way people can ignore it anymore," says Guy Mansfield, a videographer who scrambled at midnight to save equipment and hard drives before floods consumed his basement office.

Precious photographs and music memorabilia were lost. A stack of destroyed furniture and books is piled outside the Brisbane home he only bought five years ago.

"It seemed astute to move into a flood area after the last flood, because it's a little bit cheaper and we could afford a place here," he says.

"We just thought it might flood again in 30 years or something like that, and we'd totally avoid it. But yeah, here it is. We couldn't believe it."

Guy Mansfield says he lost many precious items.



Flooding on the outskirts of Brisbane earlier this month. Getty Images

Ms Walter - a climate campaigner - aims her anger at Australia's government for being slow to cut carbon emissions and invest in renewables.

"Despite the fact that we're now seeing natural disaster after natural disaster, that this has become the new normal," she says.

"I want to see more ambition, I want us to stop subsidising fossil fuels and to take up the job opportunities there can be in regional communities from renewable energy. Instead, it just feels like we're languishing at the bottom of the pile."

A report published at the COP26 global summit last year backs up that assessment. It ranked Australia last among 60 countries for policy responses to the climate crisis, largely down to a stubborn reliance on coal-powered energy and coal exports.

Like any standalone weather event, we can't say how much a changing climate contributed to these specific floods.

But scientists are united in their view that global warming is making severe floods more likely in northern Australia.

Warmer oceans increase the amount of moisture moving from seas to the atmosphere, says Australia's CSIRO government science agency. That will "most likely increase the intensity of extreme rainfall events".

Brisbane got 80% of its average annual rainfall in just three days, with more water dropping on the city than typically falls in London over a year. Sydney has had its wettest start of the year on record.

But elsewhere in Queensland and New South Wales (NSW), flooding has been even worse. To the north of Brisbane, swollen rivers continue to cut off the town of Gympie.

In Lismore in northern NSW - where some residents scrambled to roofs and waited for 24 hours or more to be rescued - rebuilding will take years.

"Australia is getting hard to live in because of these disasters," said Prime Minister Scott Morrison on a visit to the town on Wednesday.

"We are dealing with a different climate to the one we were dealing with before. I think that's just an obvious fact."

Watch footage of New South Wales floods in the past two weeks

Challenged on his climate record, Mr Morrison said the country had committed to reaching net zero by 2050 (though Australia was widely panned for not raising its crucial 2030 targets).

And he repeated his well-worn argument that reducing Australia's 1.3% share of worldwide emissions would achieve little without a global response.

But campaigners say this ignores that Australia's emissions are large for its population, while also neglecting that stronger action would send a message to the international community.

"There's been no meaningful climate action in eight years. This is a resounding failure," said Amanda Mackenzie, chief executive of the Climate Council.

Reconsidering future

In May, Australians are likely to vote in national elections - the first since the Black Summer bushfires.

With these floods fresh on the mind, the costs of climate change - environmental, human and financial - seem certain to play a big part.

Flood insurance claims look set to reach A$2bn ($1.5bn), putting them on par with those bushfires.

Mr Mansfield says he is not fully insured, but did at least have some coverage. Neighbours were even less fortunate.

"A lot of people around here are uninsured. Some companies won't insure you. Those that do, it's just so expensive. You're looking at A$1,000 a month."

Justine and Jeff Douglas moved into their home in the riverside suburb of Fairfield in December 2010, two weeks before the last major floods.

Now they're assessing water damage to a basement, that also wrote off a car, and reconsidering their future.

"In 2011, we were asked if we'd think of moving out and I said, no way," says Mrs Douglas.

"But the second time round, yeah, we are. We will."

Climate will only be one factor at voting time, she adds. During the pandemic, government tax breaks and support for small businesses "helped us out greatly".

"It's a tough one. And everyone has to really dig deep and make some really big decisions on where to go from here."

Jeff and Justine Douglas say this flood will prompt them to move house.

For her husband, even water lapping at his door for a second time has not convinced him that more extreme weather is necessarily linked to a warming planet.

"I neither believe or disbelieve, I'm terribly on the fence with climate change," Mr Douglas says.

"For as long as we know, we've had tragic events. We've had awful floods, we've had awful weather events. I think there needs to be a lot more work done on it."

But climate scientists say the evidence is clear.

In different times, news of these floods would have made far bigger headlines globally.

"We are all frustrated and we simply have to get the message out that we simply can't afford any more delay," says Prof Lesley Hughes, a climate scientist and pro-vice chancellor at Macquarie University.

"This is the most important existential threat to humanity ever. There are lots of things that grab our attention, like the crisis in Ukraine, and those are shocking tragedies.

"But in the long term, climate change is it."

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(AU RenewEconomy) “We Hold A Hose:” Emergency Services Chiefs Call Out Morrison’s Failure On Climate

RenewEconomy - 

Former Commissioner for the ACT Emergency Services Authority Major General Peter Dunn, former Commissioner of Fire and Rescue NSW Greg Mullins, former Queensland Fire and Emergency Services head Lee Johnson and former Deputy Director General of the NSW State Emergency Service Chas Keys in Brisbane. (AAP Image/Jono Searle)

Dozens of Australia’s high ranking emergency services leaders have called out the Morrison Government for its failures to prepare for the impacts of climate change and continued failures to address Australia’s contributions to greenhouse gas emissions.

The group of 37 former fire and emergency service chiefs issued a joint call under the Emergency Leaders for Climate Action collective, saying the Morrison government had been warned of the potential for major flooding events during 2022, but it failed to take any actions to prepare for their impacts.

One of Australia’s longest-serving fire chiefs, former commissioner of Fire & Rescue NSW Greg Mullins, says it is clear the Morrison Government has consistently failed to heed the advice of experts on climate change and the need for better preparation to respond to the growing threat of floods, droughts, and bushfires.

“Time and again this government fails to listen to expert advice. There are 80 recommendations of the Royal Commission into National Natural Disaster Arrangements gathering dust,” Mullins said.

“The Government has failed to implement them. Our elected leaders in Canberra are failing communities right around the country impacted by this disaster, and the thousands of emergency service volunteers and professionals who willingly place their own lives in danger by responding to increasingly frequent and dangerous climate-fuelled disasters.”

“Those of us who do hold hoses know just how dangerous climate change has become. Australia is under-prepared, and Canberra has no answers to how it will rapidly slash emissions this decade.”

Throughout February and March, communities across both New South Wales and Queensland have been devastated by unprecedented levels of flooding that have destroyed properties and claimed the lives of at least 22 people.

Many communities found themselves isolated during the peak of the flooding events and were left largely to fend for themselves – including undertaking their own rescues from rising floodwaters – when emergency service responses were found lacking.

Climate scientists have warned that increased global warming will likely lead to the increased frequency and severity of extreme climate events like floods and bushfires and that urgent action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions is needed to minimise the risk.

Prime minister Scott Morrison has been reluctant to accept the urgency of the climate crisis, instead backing the continued expansion of Australia’s coal and gas industries, exacerbating global warming.

This stance has evidently flowed through to the Morrison government’s failure to prepare for the resulting impacts of climate change, and its failure to respond to the flooding emergency once it was evident that thousands of homes and businesses were likely to be devastated.

An emergency declaration by the Morrison government came so late that it had to omit Queensland, as by the time the government was ready to issue the declaration, the worst of the flooding threat in the state had already subsided.

Former commissioner and ACT Emergency Services Authority, major general Peter Dunn, said the flooding wasn’t the first time in recent years that communities were left isolated during a climate change-fuelled disaster, citing the communities largely abandoned following the 2019-20 summer bushfires.

“I know what it’s like to so helplessly witness my community torn apart by a disaster. During Black Summer the fires ripped through Lake Conjola and soon after, we were dealing with a flood,” Dunn said.

“We had no support. We were left to pick up the pieces ourselves. Communities are once again being left behind and it’s clear the lessons of Black Summer have not been learned.”

“As climate change escalates these disasters, history cannot continue to repeat itself.”

“The common denominator is the feeling of abandonment and lack of Federal Government preparedness to respond to these increasingly fierce disasters and address climate change at its root cause: the extraction and burning of fossil fuels,” Dunn added.

On Monday, federal resources minister Keith Pitt announced that up to ten new sites – in seas off the coast of Western Australia, Victoria and Tasmania – may be released for exploration and development of new petroleum reserves, with Pitt again using the conflict in Ukraine as a justification for the expansion of Australia’s fossil fuel industry.

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(AU ABC) Children's Climate Change Case Overturned On Appeal As Federal Court Dismisses Government's 'Duty Of Care'

ABC News Michael Slezak | Penny Timms

The teenagers said their "fight for a safe future" would not be deterred by the Federal Court's ruling. (ABC News: Michael Slezak)

Key Points
  • A group of eight children launched the class action in 2020
  • The initial judgement agreed the minister had a "duty of care" when assessing fossil fuel projects
  • Experts say an appeal is likely, but in the meantime, the latest ruling removes the duty of care
Federal Environment Minister Sussan Ley has successfully argued she does not have a duty of care to protect young people from climate change when assessing fossil fuel projects.

The ruling of the full bench of the Federal Court today overturned an earlier win by a group of eight children, who brought a class action on behalf of all Australian children that temporarily established the new common-law duty of care.

Experts say the children are likely to appeal against the decision in the High Court, but in the meantime, the ruling removes the duty of care that was established by Justice Mordecai Bromberg.

The class action, led by teenager Anj Sharma, argued that the environment minister had a duty of care to protect young people from climate change, and that this needed to be a consideration in the approval process for projects that would produce greenhouse gas.

Anj Sharma said she was devastated by the Federal Court's judgement. (ABC News: Michael Slezak)
The original class action also argued that digging up and burning coal would make climate change worse and harm young people in the future.

The earlier win, now overturned, led to headlines around the world. The world-first case relied on common-law principles to establish the duty of care, and so was relevant to other common-law countries including England, the United States and New Zealand.

Court unanimous in decision

On Tuesday the full bench of the Federal Court was unanimous in overturning the previous decision.

The judgement said while the evidence of climate change and its dangers to humanity was not disputed, the environment minister did not have a duty of care to Australia's children.

The teenagers first brought the class action in 2020. (ABC News: Michael Slezak)

Ms Sharma said she was angry and devastated by the decision, but said it would not deter the teenagers in their "fight for a safe future".

"The Federal Court today may have accepted the minister's legal arguments over ours, but that does not change the minister's moral obligation to take action on climate change," she said.
"It does not change the science. It does not put out the fires or drain the floodwaters. We will not stop in our fight for climate justice. The world is watching."
Lawyer David Barnden said they would review the judgement and consider their next steps. (ABC News: Michael Slezak)
David Barnden from Equity Generation Lawyers, who represented the class action, said the decision was "disappointing".

"We will continue to support young people in their fight for a safe future and we will carefully review this decision to determine the next steps."

Ms Ley welcomed the decision, saying "common sense has prevailed".

In a statement, her office said the government would closely review the judgement and was "committed to protecting our environment for current and future generations".

Common-law climate case a world-first

In the initial judgement last May, Justice Bromberg agreed the minister had the duty of care to protect young people from climate change, that climate change would cause catastrophic and "startling" harm to young people, and that approving a new coal mine would increase the chance of that harm.

The original case also asked the court for an injunction to prevent the minister approving the Whitehaven Coal's Vickery Extension Project near Gunnedah in New South Wales.

Federal Environment Minister Sussan Ley has won her appeal against the original decision. (ABC News: Ian Cutmore)

While Justice Mordecai Bromberg agreed that the duty of care existed, he denied the application for an injunction on technical grounds.

Four months after the initial ruling last May, Ms Ley approved the coal mine, arguing that despite the duty of care existing, her approving the mine would not contribute to the heating of the world, since there were plenty of other sources that could satisfy coal demand.

On Tuesday, all three Federal Court judges had different reasoning as to why the government's appeal should be allowed, and Justice Bromberg's ruling was overturned.

One reason was that allowing the "duty of care" ruling to stand would have required changes to government policy, with chief justice James Allsop saying that should be left to the government itself, not the courts.

A lawyer says the decision could be seen as a setback for other people wanting to pursue climate action in the courts. (ABC News: Michael Slezak)

Jacqueline Peel, a professor at Melbourne Law School and the director of research group Melbourne Climate Futures, said the decision could be seen as a setback for other people who want to pursue climate change action in court.

"This judgement really says, 'Look, it's not the role of the courts to make these decisions — it's the role of our governments'," she said.

"But … part of the reason that people have taken these issues to the courts — why these kids were suing the government in the first place — was because of a lack of effective government policy."

Professor Peel also said because the latest Federal Court ruling was unanimous, it could be difficult for the children to appeal the decision.

Environment Minister Sussan Ley has successfully argued she does not have a duty of care to protect young people from climate change when assessing fossil fuel projects. Michael Slezak reports.

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