At
last, Radio New Zealand has caught up! (almost)
Fire,
flood, rising sea threaten future
Veronika
Meduna, Our Changing World
31
March, 2014
Wildfires,
more frequent and severe floods, and higher risks to coastal
infrastructure due to rising seas are just some of the impacts New
Zealanders can expect from climate change in the coming decades.
The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change on Monday officially
released its report on impacts, adaptation and vulnerability, which
identifies eight key risks that will affect New Zealand and Australia
as temperatures continue to rise in step with increased greenhouse
gas emissions
The
report is the second part of the IPCC's Fifth Assessment, the most
comprehensive assessment of the world's vulnerabilities to climate
change, and it warns that adapting to future impacts in this region
could mean having to translocate industries and giving up on
protecting certain areas from sea level rise and excessive heat.
An increase in heat waves, constraints on water resources and loss of agricultural production represent three risk areas that apply to both countries, but will have a more immediate and more damaging impact in Australia.
Wildfires
are expected to cause damage to settlements and ecosystems, economic
losses and risks to human life in many parts of New Zealand as a
consequence of drier and warmer conditions.
One
of the lead authors for the report's chapter on New Zealand and
Australia, NIWA climate scientist Andrew Tait, says wildfire is
already a major issue in Australia, but New Zealand now also faces a
higher risk.
"Large
areas of the country which have traditionally not been high-risk
areas, Southland and Waikato for example, due to a warming
environment leading to more evapotranspiration and a drying of the
soils and the vegetation are going to be more at risk from wildfires
as we move through the century."
Droughts
will be more intense.
The
chapter's coordinating lead author, Agricultural Greenhouse Gas
Research Centre deputy director Andy Reisinger, says wildfires could
be more destructive in New Zealand's as our native forests are not
adapted to it.
"The
other point is of course that much of how New Zealand has dealt with
rising greenhouse gas emissions so far was to plant forestry that
absorbs carbon from the atmosphere, and it's ironic that there's now
a rising risk in releasing such stored carbon in wildfires."
Rainfall
predictions for New Zealand are for more rain in the south and west,
and drier conditions in the north and east. Andrew Tait says the main
pattern is associated with a likely change in westerlies over the
country, which are projected to increase mostly in the spring and in
winter.
"Some
of our large South Island catchments have their headwaters in the
Alps where we are expecting mean rainfall and the extreme events
associated with warmer temperatures to increase, leading to larger
floods, in the order of 5 to 10 per cent larger by the middle of the
century, to what we've been used to in the past."
The
Waikato's Waipa River flooding below Te Kuiti.
Sea level rise is expected to reach about half a metre by the end of the century under low-emission scenarios, but Dr Reisinger says even that will be a challenge for New Zealand, with most of our cities and infrastructure built on flood plains and near river mouths.
"There is scope to adapt but it would require what we call transformative adaptation, which simply means giving up protecting everything but deciding that some areas cannot be protected and we have to think about shifting some communities away from the coast over time. And that would mean major social upheaval."
However, there will be some benefits from climate change for New Zealand. Warmer winters will mean lower heating bills and might reduce winter illnesses, forest growth is expected to increase, and some parts of New Zealand can expect stronger spring pasture growth.
An increase in heat waves, constraints on water resources and loss of agricultural production represent three risk areas that apply to both countries, but will have a more immediate and more damaging impact in Australia.
For
example, the Murray Darling Basin could lose 70 per cent or more of
its current food production on a regular basis towards the end of the
century.
Two
other key risks - the loss of montane ecosystems and changes to the
structure of coral reefs - apply only to Australia.
Regional
average temperatures in this region have already increased by 0.9
degrees over the last century, and sea levels have risen by 20cm -
and the report predicts this will continue.
"It's
virtually certain that the region will continue to warm throughout
the 21st century and there the projected changes are between 1.5
degrees more for the most stringent global scenario for reducing
greenhouse gas emissions up to more than 4 degrees warmer than at
present," says Dr Reisinger.
I think the contortions that this document deliberately spews is on purpose:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.climatechange2013.org/images/report/WG1AR5_SPM_FINAL.pdf
Fucking idiots. It’s as if they are deliberately trying to confuse the issue. I understand it well enough – but it does NOT depict what is accurate or imminent imo.
How the fuck is a policy maker supposed to make a decision from a document like this? They can’t – and they won’t. It downplays what is a virtual certainty and completely ignores critical areas.
What a waste of time and expectations this is.
I could not agree more about your assessment of this article. I have been corresponding with the author - she cannot claim ignorance!
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