The
Department of Conservation said it has rescue plans in place for
native fish species if the drought deepens in Otago.
Our
biosphere is a complex system of interwoven habitats and species.
When you have to rescue fish in a river and humans are pollinating
fruit trees in China by hand because the bees have died off surely it
dawns on people that we are in a time of abrupt climate change and
the biosphere is collapsing?
The
“in ten years” bit does not begin to reflect the reality.
South
Canterbury in worst drought for ten years
Federated
Farmers in South Canterbury says the region is experiencing its worst
drought in ten years
1 February, 2015
Its
president, Ivon Hurst, said sheep farmers have been offloading lambs
since December and the market is flooded.
But
he said dairy farmers are more vulnerable because they do not have
the same flexibility.
Mr
Hurst says the Opuha Dam, which supplies 170 properties, has just
three weeks of water left, which means farmers will have to make
decisions fast.
He
said with no significant rain forecast for the region, there was no
relief in иsight.
A
forecaster says some rain could be on its way in the coming week to
provide relief to parched farmers in Otago and South Canterbury.
Farmers
on the eastern side of the South Island have been experiencing a long
spell of hot dry weather since a dry spring last year.
A
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric research forecaster,
Chris Brandolino, said rain was due in some areas.
He
said in Southland, Otago, and South Canterbury there was likely to be
meaningful falls which should give relief to farmers.
But
the prospect of rain in central and northern areas of Canterbury was
less likely, he said.
Meanwhile,
the Department of Conservation said it has rescue plans in place for
native fish species if the drought deepens in Otago.
Dunedin
conservation services manager David Agnew said fish are dying but
populations are not yet in crisis.
David
Agnew said the Department of Conservation was working with Fish and
Game, Ngai Tahu and the regional council to monitor fish stocks in
the region's rivers.
He
was confident there was still enough water and sufficient numbers of
fish that when the rain returned and the rivers started running,
populations would bounce back.
This
report is from last year. You will have to look hard for anyone to join the dots.
We
had a crippling drought in the North Island in 2013: eels died in
Canterbury rivers for lack of water; and we have another drought that
covers most of the country if you look at the soil moisture deficit
maps.
New
report links 2013 drought and climate change
30
September, 2014
A
new report on global extreme weather events confirms climate change
was a factor in last year’s crippling North Island drought.
“Scientists
are generally wary of linking single weather events to climate
change, so this is a significant acknowledgement of the role man-made
climate change played what was one of the worst droughts in New
Zealand’s history,” said Green Party climate change spokesperson
Dr Kennedy Graham.
The
report, “Explaining extreme events of 2013 from a climate
perspective”, was published overnight in the Bulletin of the
American Meteorological Society.
In
a section entitled “The role of anthropogenic climate change in the
2013 drought over the North Island, New Zealand” it says models
show “meteorological drivers were more favourable for drought as a
result of anthropogenic climate change”.
“The
2013 drought cost the New Zealand economy billions of dollars,”
said Dr Graham.
“We
should be doing everything we can to avoid a repeat, yet National
continues to sit on its hands over climate change.
“Under
National, New Zealand’s net emissions have risen 20 per cent and
are projected to rise by another 50 percent in the next 10 years.
“National
has failed to implement both effective climate change mitigation
policies, and appropriate adaptation measures.
“As
a result, New Zealand’s emissions continue to climb, and there is
no national strategy to deal with the increasing threat of extreme
weather.
“Over
six years in office, National has failed New Zealanders on climate,
and unless it changes tack in its third term, it risks further
damage, including the fallout from extreme weather events,” said Dr
Graham.
The
Green Party would scrap National’s failed emissions trading scheme
and introduce a fair and transparent tax on carbon, the revenue from
which would be returned to households and businesses in the form of
tax cuts.
The
Green Party also has a range of complementary measures to help New
Zealand transition to a low-carbon economy and reduce its emissions.
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