Jim Salinger, NZ's foremost and best-known climate change researcher, was sacked from NIWA (National
Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research), where he worked,in 2009 for speaking out about climate change with the media.
Needless to say NIWA does not go beyond anything that is politically- acceptable.
Auckland must prepare for climate change - scientist
File photo / Brett Phibbs
Needless to say NIWA does not go beyond anything that is politically- acceptable.
Auckland must prepare for climate change - scientist
Aucklanders need to prepare for the wide-ranging impacts that climate change will have on their city, a leading scientist says.
3
December, 2014
Independent
climate scientist Dr Jim Salinger, author of the book Living In a
Warmer World, will explain what climate change will mean for New
Zealand's largest city in a public lecture at AUT University tomorrow
evening.
Dr
Salinger believed there was not enough awareness of what several
degrees of warming -- and potentially more than a metre of sea level
rise -- within this century could mean for Aucklanders, as well as
all Kiwis.
"In
my personal view, people who live on the coast are not aware -- but
when their homes become uninsurable, they'll be very aware."
According
to present projections, the mean temperature in New Zealand could be
2C higher by the end of the century -- and even between 3C and 4C
higher if no action is taken to curb the world's carbon emissions.
Within
the same period, sea level was expected to rise between 50cm and
120cm, leaving populations to adapt by either abandoning coasts and
islands, changing infrastructure and coastal zones, or protecting
areas with barriers or dykes.
Already,
temperatures in Auckland had warmed by 1C over the last 100 years,
while sea level rise from 1899 to 2014 was in the order of 18 cm, Dr
Salinger said.
A
report on sea level rise by Parliamentary Commissioner for the
Environment Dr Jan Wright said the impact of even a small rise in sea
level would be significant and very costly for some landowners.
Storms
occurring on top of a higher sea level would affect public
infrastructure such as roads, railways and stormwater systems, as
well as private homes and other buildings.
Climate
change was also expected to result in more large storms compounding
the effects of sea level rise.
The
major coastal floods that Auckland experienced in 1936 and 2011 --
the latter flooding downtown shops, homes and roads -- would occur
about once every decade, according to Niwa projections.
If
climate change continued unabated, that frequency could increase to
each year.
"Just
think about what happened in April this year, where there was
flooding on the northwestern motorway and Tamaki Drive. That would
become commonplace," Dr Salinger said.
"We
really have to be thinking now about how we plan cities -- including
where people are and what they'll need to do -- because these sorts
of things take a while to implement."
In
another impact Dr Salinger will address, Auckland would feel the
effect of climate change on Pacific nations, which he considered New
Zealand's "front yard".
He
said the risk of displacement and relocation from Pacific islands was
a reality, and building capacity for an influx of new residents in
Auckland now should be a priority.
Auckland
Pacific communities would also need to be strong to accommodate
migrants and assist those remaining in the islands.
Dr
Salinger noted how New Zealand's 20,000-strong Niuean population,
mainly in Auckland, raised funds and provided volunteers to help in
Niue in the wake of the devastating Cyclone Heta in 2004.
Industries
would also see change.
Hayward
kiwifruit production may become uneconomic in Auckland over the next
50 years, due to a lack of winter chilling, while sub-tropical crops
such as avocados and citrus would benefit from a trend towards warmer
average conditions.
Some
tropical fruit crops could presently be grown in localised
micro-climates in Auckland, but it was likely that opportunities for
these crops would increase, he said.
A
warmer climate might change where wine production could be based
around the region, but would also bring more pest and disease
pressure.
Rising
ocean temperatures and ocean acidification was also altering marine
life, moving fisheries southward, threatening shell fisheries, and
changing life cycles.
But
Dr Salinger said climate warming was just one of several pressures on
fisheries, and reducing fishing pressure could only help the
situation.
His
talk, part of the Auckland Conservations series, will be held from
5.30pm tomorrow, December 4, at the Sir Paul Reeves Building lecture
theatre, Governor Fitzroy Pl.
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