Bushfire
alert for Sydney northwest
Catastrophic fire rating imposed for West Coast district of SA
Forecast strong winds and high temperatures have led to declaration of a catastrophic danger rating for the West Coast fire district of South Australia, the first such rating of the season.
ABC,
6
November, 2013
Danger
ratings ranging from severe to extreme apply for the North West
Pastoral, Eastern and Lower Eyre Peninsula, Mid North, Yorke
Peninsula and Mount Lofty Ranges districts.
Authorities
say two aerial fire bombers will be stationed at Port Lincoln.
George
Kozminski of the Country Fire Service said people on the state's west
coast need to be prepared for any problems during the day.
"There's
been significant grass growth out in the west coast with early rains
and also good rains during the growing season," he said.
"There's
plenty of fuel out there and although many farmers in the farming
land have probably finished reaping or just about close to it there
is still a significant fuel load out there even with the stubble
that's remaining."
The
region's schools and kindergartens will be closed for the day at
Elliston, Karcultaby, Lock and Miltaburra.
All
school buses services for those schools that are open have been
cancelled due to the danger.
The
Education Department said parents would need to drive their children
to schools that remained open.
Temperatures
in the high 30s have been forecast for much South Australia, and into
the low 40s for a handful of areas, ahead of a change later in the
day.
About
9:00am ACDT, fire units were called to tackle a grass fire on
Gomersal Road, just west of Tanunda in the Barossa Valley. It was
started by a vehicle exhaust.
This article is from last month -
Australian
Wildfires Put Heat On Tony Abbott, Country's Anti-Climate Change
Prime Minister
Australians have elected a fool for PM
21
October, 2013
A long, hot summer looms
for Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott as devastating wildfires
near Sydney fuel opposition to his plans to repeal a carbon emissions
tax, one of his basic campaign pledges in the election he won a month
ago.
The
links between the blazes and climate change caused by carbon
emissions are complex and as the driest inhabited landmass on earth,
deadly wildfires have been a perennial problem for Australia.
But
a series of record-busting hot, dry conditions across the continent
and an early start to the Southern Hemisphere summer has rekindled
arguments on mankind's impact on climate and what can be done to
mitigate it.
Abbott
was elected in September on the back of plans to repeal Australia's
scheme to price the carbon emissions responsible for global warming.
He has promised to dissolve both the lower house and the Senate if
his plan to scrap the scheme is blocked.
But
as the fires spread, the pressure is mounting on Abbott, who once
described the science around climate change as "absolute crap".
"Reducing
emissions is not a free lunch, but neither is climate change,"
said John Conner, the Chief Executive of independent research
organisation The Climate Institute. "If we're serious about
reducing the risks of climate change and climate impacts like these
bushfires, then we need to have a serious climate policy which is
credible."
More
than 200 homes have been destroyed since last Thursday as scores of
fires burned through thousands of hectares of bush, farms and rural
communities outside Sydney. A state of emergency has been declared in
New South Wales (NSW) state, Australia's most populous.
Forecasts
for a return of hot, windy weather later this week has raised fears
that three of the most dangerous blazes in the Blue Mountains west of
Sydney could join up to form a massive "mega-fire",
according to the New South Wales Rural Fire Service.
CARBON
PRICING BATTLE
The
previous Labor government's carbon pricing plan was aimed at reducing
emissions by taxing major polluters with the world's highest carbon
price of A$23 ($22.23) a tonne before moving to a market cap and
trade system by mid-2014.
Abbott,
a volunteer NSW firefighter himself, now faces a tough test to
convince opposition politicians to repeal it when parliament resumes
next month, with the Greens and Labor vowing to fight changes.
Abbott
has a clear majority in the lower house, but if he fails to get the
legislation through a hostile Senate, he has promised to call a
double dissolution to break the deadlock. Such a move, last called in
1987, would mean elections to both the lower house and the upper
house.
After
earlier rubbishing climate change, Abbott has subsequently
acknowledged that it is happening and has proposed a "direct
action policy" that would fund some projects that reduce or
avoid greenhouse gas emissions and punish businesses which exceed
their "business as usual" emission baselines.
But
just days after taking over as prime minister on Sept 18, Abbott
dismantled the Climate Commission and the Climate Change Authority,
the two main government bodies for reporting the science of climate
change and providing advice on carbon pricing and emissions reduction
targets.
Before
being disbanded, the Climate Commission had reported that climate
change had increased the incidence of bushfires in many regions, with
heat waves more frequent and severe and the number of hot days in
Australia doubling since the 1960s.
Last
month, leading global climate scientists said they were more certain
that human activity was the main cause of global warming, which would
bring more heatwaves and droughts, as well as more floods and rising
sea-levels.
Scientists
and most politicians are loath to link single weather or fire events
to climate change, and Australian Greens deputy leader Adam Bandt was
heavily criticised by some government ministers and media for
"political point-scoring" when he did that after last
week's blazes.
But
the fires and persistent hot weather would increase public pressure
on Abbott to come up with a strong alternative to carbon pricing,
said Tristan Edis, a former research fellow at the Grattan Institute
and now editor of Climate Spectator.
"It's
not just about axing something. He's got to replace it with something
that credible and in that respect, (the fires) help people that are
concerned about climate change and want to see government action on
it, it helps their cause to keep this top of mind."
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