Expect more Aussies to cross the Ditch in the next few years
Climate
Change Will Hit Australia the Hardest, Study Says
Science
agency the CSIRO and Bureau of Meteorology predict temperature rises
of up to 5.1c in Australia by 2090 in their most comprehensive
forecast yet
Australia may be on track for a temperature rise of more than 5°C by the end of the century, outstripping the rate of warming experienced by the rest of the world. Credit: Warren/Flickr
26
January, 2015
Australia
could be on track for a temperature rise of more than 5C by the end
of the century, outstripping the rate of warming experienced by the
rest of the world, unless drastic action is taken to slash greenhouse
gas emissions, according to the most comprehensive analysis ever
produced of the country’s future climate.
The
national science agency CSIRO and the Bureau of Meteorology
have released
the projections based
on 40 global climate models, producing what they said was the most
robust picture yet of how Australia’s climate would change.
The
report stated there was “very high confidence” that temperatures
would rise across Australia throughout the century, with the average
annual temperature set to be up to 1.3C warmer in 2030 compared with
the average experienced between 1986 and 2005.
Temperature
projections for the end of the century depend on how deeply, if at
all, greenhouse gas emissions are cut. The world is tracking at the
higher emissions scenario, meaning a temperature increase of between
2.8C and 5.1C in Australia by 2090.
According
to the report, this “business-as-usual” approach to burning
fossil fuels is set to cook Australia more than the rest of the
world, which will average a temperature increase of 2.6C to 4.8C by
2090.
Australia’s
surface air temperature has already increased 0.9C since 1910, with
the number of extreme heat records outnumbering extreme cool records
nearly three to one since 2001.
Australia
experienced its third-warmest
year on record in 2014,
with 2013 its warmest
year on record.
The heat experienced in 2013 was “unlikely” to have been caused
by natural variability alone, the report stated, with such
temperatures now five times more likely due to humans releasing
greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
Other
findings of the wide-ranging analysis, the first such Australian
climate projection made since 2007, included:
- The interior of Australia is set to warm more rapidly than coastal areas. Alice Springs will experience an average of 83 days a year over 40C in 2090, up from just 17 in 1995.
- Melbourne will swelter through an average of 24 days above 35C by 2090, up from 11 in 1995. Sydney will experience 11 days above 35C by 2090, an increase from three days in 1995.
- Australia is on course for a sea level rise of 45cm to 82cm by 2090, if emissions are not curbed. The report warned that if the Antarctic ice sheet was to collapse, sea levels would be a further “several tenths of a metre higher by late in the century”.
- Extreme rainfall events will increase but overall rainfall is expected to drop in southern Australia, apart from Tasmania, during the winter and spring months – by as much as 69% by 2090.
- There will be more extreme droughts, with the length of droughts increasing by between 5% and 20%, depending on how quickly greenhouse gases are cut.
- Rising temperatures will result in a “greater number of days with severe fire danger”. Meanwhile, soil moisture will fall by up to 15% in southern Australia in the winter months by 2090.
- Snow cover will decline, with the report stating there was “high confidence that as warming progresses there will be very substantial decreases in snowfall, increase in melt and thus reduced snow cover”.
These
changes are likely to produce some benefits, such as enhanced
agriculture in Tasmania and fewer deaths from cold weather. But they
will be overshadowed by the negatives, such as rising numbers of
deaths from heatwaves, water resource challenges, impacts upon
agriculture and risks posed to coastal infrastructure by rising seas.
Excess
carbon dioxide absorbed by the oceans causes the water’s pH level
to drop. This acidification makes it more difficult for corals to
form hard reef structures and other creatures such as oysters, clams,
lobsters and crabs to develop their shells.
This
phenomenon poses a
major risk to ecosystems such as the Great Barrier Reef and
is, according to the report, “likely to impact the entire marine
ecosystem from plankton at the base to fish at the top”.
Kevin
Hennessy, a principal research scientist at the CSIRO, said it and
the Bureau of Meteorology now had a greater confidence than ever in
their forecasts of Australia’s climate.
“We
expect land areas to warm faster than ocean areas, and polar regions
faster than the tropics,” Hennessy told Guardian Australia.
Given
Australia’s geographical position, that would mean much of the
country was expected to warm faster than the global average.
“Australia
will warm faster than the rest of the world,” Hennessy said.
“Warming of 4C to 5C would have a very significant effect: there
would be increases in extremely high temperatures, much less snow,
more intense rainfall, more fires and rapid sea level rises.”
Hennessy
said even the internationally agreed limit of 2C of warming on
pre-industrial times would cause severe problems for Australia.
“That
intermediate emissions scenario would have significant effects for
Australia,” he said. “Coral reefs are sensitive to even small
changes in ocean temperature and a 1C rise would have severe
implications for the Great Barrier Reef and Ningaloo reef.
“The
situation is looking grim for the Great Barrier Reef unless we can
significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions. A 2C future would be
very challenging.”
Hennessy
said Australia should prepare for this altered climate by ensuring
hospitals, transport infrastructure, construction codes and fire
planning all considered the rising temperatures.
Cutting
emissions would also help head off the worst of climate change, with
nations set to convene
in Paris later
this year for crunch talks aimed at agreeing emissions reductions
beyond 2020.
“Achieving
that intermediate, rather than higher, emissions path would require
significant reductions in global greenhouse gases,” Hennessy said.
“It’s difficult to say what will be achieved, there are a lot of
negotiations to come in Paris. We hope there will be an agreement
until 2050 at least, but who knows what will happen in the coming
decades.”
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