AUSTRALIA-WEATHER-FIRES

Dangerous climate change is at work in Australia

Covering Climate Now

 

This story originally appeared in the Guardian and is republished here as part of Covering Climate Now, a global journalistic collaboration to strengthen coverage of the climate story. It is written by climate scientist Michael Mann. 

 

 

After years of studying the climate, my work has brought me to Sydney, where I’m studying the links between climate change and extreme weather events.

Prior to beginning my sabbatical stay in Sydney, I took the opportunity this holiday season to have a vacation in Australia with my family. We went to see the Great Barrier Reef – one of the great wonders of this planet – while we still can. Subject to the twin assaults of ocean acidification and warming caused by bleaching, it will be gone in a matter of decades unless there is a dramatic reduction in global carbon emissions.

We also travelled to the Blue Mountains, another of Australia’s natural wonders, known for their lush temperate rainforests, majestic cliffs and rock formations and panoramic vistas which are as magnificent as any the world has to offer. They too are now threatened by climate change.

I witnessed this firsthand.

I did not see vast expanses of rainforest framed by distant blue-tinged mountain ranges. Instead I looked out into smoke-filled valleys, with only the faintest ghosts of distant ridges and peaks in the background. The iconic blue tint (which derives from a haze formed from “terpenes” emitted by the eucalyptus trees that are so plentiful here) was replaced by a brown haze. The blue sky had also been replaced by that brown haze.

The locals, whom I found to be friendly and outgoing, would volunteer that they have never seen anything like this before. Some even uttered the words “climate change” without any prompting.

The songs of Peter Garrett and Midnight Oil I first enjoyed decades ago have taken on a whole new meaning for me now. They seem disturbingly prescient in light of what we are witnessing unfold in Australia.

The brown skies I observed in the Blue Mountains this week are a product of  climate change caused by humans. Take record heat, combine it with unprecedented drought in already dry regions and you get unprecedented bushfires like the ones engulfing the Blue Mountains and spreading across the continent. It’s not complicated.

The warming of our planet and the changes in climate associated with it are due to the fossil fuels we’re burning: oil (whether at midnight or any other hour of the day), natural gas and the biggest culprit of all, coal. It’s not complicated.

When we mine for coal, like the controversial planned Adani coalmine, which would more than double Australia’s coal-based carbon emissions, we are literally mining away our blue skies. The Adani coalmine could rightly be renamed the Blue Sky mine.

In Australia, beds are burning. So are entire towns and irreplaceable forests. Precious, endangered animal species such as the koala (arguably the world’s only living plush toy) are perishing in massive numbers due to the unprecedented bushfires.

The continent of Australia is on fire: figuratively and literally. Yet the prime minister, Scott Morrison, appears remarkably indifferent to the climate emergency Australia is suffering through. He chose to go on vacation in Hawaii as Australians were left to contend with unprecedented disaster.

Morrison has shown himself to be beholden to coal interests and his administration is considered to have sided with a small number of petrostates at the recent UN climate conference in Madrid. COP25 was seen as a last ditch effort to keep planetary warming below a level (1.5 degrees Celsius) considered by many to constitute “dangerous” planetary warming.

But Australians need only wake up in the morning, turn on the television, read the newspaper or look out the window to see what is increasingly obvious to many: for Australia, dangerous climate change is already here. It’s simply a matter of how much worse we’re willing to allow it to get.

Australia is experiencing a climate emergency. It is literally burning. It needs leadership that is able to recognize that and act. And it needs voters to hold politicians accountable at the ballot box.

Australians must vote out fossil-fuelled politicians who have chosen to be part of the problem and vote in climate champions who are willing to solve it.

  • Michael E Mann is distinguished professor of atmospheric science at Pennsylvania State University. His most recent book, with Tom Toles, is The Madhouse Effect: How Climate Change Denial Is Threatening Our Planet, Destroying Our Politics, and Driving Us Crazy (Columbia University Press, 2016).
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