This
is what climate change (or its early stages) means
Australia
Braces For 'Catastrophic Conditions' As Bushfire Season Begins
Reuters/Country Fire Authority
A helicopter dumps water on a bushfire burning in the Grampians bushland in the southeastern Australian state of Victoria, about 300 km (186 miles) west of Melbourne, January 17, 2014.
A helicopter dumps water on a bushfire burning in the Grampians bushland in the southeastern Australian state of Victoria, about 300 km (186 miles) west of Melbourne, January 17, 2014.
22
October, 2014
The
Climate Council predicts the economic cost of fires will be thrice as
much by mid-century as the current number of firefighters in the
country will need to double to control the bushfires. The commission
has repeatedly urged the Australian government to cut carbon
emissions "rapidly and deeply" to lower the risk of hotter
and drier conditions.
2013
was the hottest year on record in Australia, The
Guardian
reports. The council's report cited the findings as proof of the
conditions leading up to the possibility of "very high fire
danger weather" in Sydney. The last summer was Sydney's driest
in almost 30 years. Before the official start of the bushfire season
in October, more than 50 city councils have announced the beginning
of fire danger.
Climate
Council CEO Amanda McKenzie said the recent years have prompted the
introduction of a new fire warning category. She said the country saw
the new fire warning of "catastrophic conditions" in
Victoria's "Black Saturday" bushfires in 2009. The same
warning was spread in South Australia, Tasmania and NSW.
McKenzie
explained that longer fire seasons meant there might be instances
when crucial measures are not implemented. Bushfire risk is escalated
by a "long-term drying trend" caused by climate change
resulting to a decreasing rainfall in the southern part of the
country since the middle of the 1990s. According to the Bureau of
Meteorology, the next three months in Australia is expected to be
drier than normal with less soil moisture. There is a high risk of
logs and forest debris to burn up easily because of dry conditions.
The
Climate Council estimates the total economic cost of expected
bushfires in NSW will be at $37 million in 2014. The council operates
on crowdsource funding since the Abbott government withdrew its
support in 2013.
To
contact the editor, e-mail: editor@ibtimes.com
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