Maybe there's some hope for Australians – 77% of people who responded to a Fairfax poll think there is a connection between bushfires and climate change
Clear
link between climate change and bushfires: UN adviser warns Tony
Abbott
A
senior United Nations climate change official says there is
''absolutely'' a link between climate change and bushfires and has
warned that the Coalition government will pay a high political and
financial price for its decision to scrap carbon pricing.
SMH,
26
January, 2013
In
an interview with CNN's Christine Amanpour on Monday, the head of the
UN's climate change negotiations, Christiana Figueres, said there was
a clear link between climate change and bushfires such as those
raging in New South Wales.
She
noted that the World Meteorological Organisation had not yet
established a direct link between the NSW fires and climate change.
"But
what is absolutely clear is the science is telling us that there are
increasing heat waves in Asia, Europe, and Australia; that these will
continue; that they will continue in their intensity and in their
frequency," Ms Figueres said.
The
highly unusual intervention by a senior UN official in a domestic
climate policy debate comes three weeks before the next major round
of UN-sponsored talks in Warsaw. The negotiations are aiming to reach
a global climate treaty by 2015 that would take effect by 2020.
Ms
Figueres described the NSW fires as an ''example of what we may be
looking at unless we take actually vigorous action''.
The
UN negotiator said the new Abbott government had chosen a more
difficult and expensive path to emissions reduction than the previous
Gillard government – noting that the Coalition had not stepped away
from Australia's commitment to reduce its emissions by 5 per cent by
2020.
''The
road that they are choosing to get to the same target that the
previous government had could be much more expensive for them and for
the population,'' Ms Figueres said.
This
comes as Environment Minister Greg Hunt announced that the government
could bypass the Senate and introduce its ''direct action'' carbon
abatement policy through regulation.
The
UN adviser said the Abbott government would not only pay a high
political price but a ''very high financial price'' for stepping away
from a price on carbon.
''What
we need to do is put a price on carbon so that we don't have to
continue to pay the price of carbon,'' she said.
Last
week, the Australian Greens were criticised for drawing a link
between the carbon tax and climate change at the height of the
crisis, when homes had been lost and a man had lost his life.
On
Monday, Mr Hunt would not be drawn on links between climate change
and the NSW fires.
''There
are 2000-odd firefighters in the field as we speak, there have been
over 200 homes lost and of course a terrible tragedy on the Central
Coast,'' he told reporters in Canberra.
''No
one, no one should be politicising these bushfires.''
Labor
leader Bill Shorten said it was not the right time to debate possible
links between the bushfires and climate change.
When
asked on Monday if climate change made disastrous events such as the
NSW fires more likely, NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell replied: ''Well,
clearly, I think that's the science.''
He
told the ABC's 7.30 that his job was to translate science into
practical action.
''I
understand that if you're planning new developments, if you're
planning greenfield sites, you can ensure whether for flood damage or
for fire damage, you build in a certain way,'' Mr O'Farrell said.
He
said it was difficult to ''retro-fit'' already established
communities such as the Blue Mountains.
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