By Duncan B
The eastern half of Australia is in
the grip of severe drought. New South Wales is 100% in drought, with 20% of the
state in severe drought. In July less than 10 mm of rain fell in the West,
North West and Central regions. The drought is claimed to be worse than the
drought of 1902.
Queensland is entering its seventh
year of drought with 60% of the state in drought. In Victoria the Mallee and
East Gippsland are also suffering from drought, with some areas receiving the
lowest rainfall on record. Dry conditions in South Australia and Western
Australia are also causing concern.
Livestock farmers are paying record
prices for hay to feed their livestock. Many are selling all their stock in
order to survive. Crop farmers face the prospect of a year with no income as
crops fail. Soil erosion is becoming a
problem in some areas because of the extremely dry conditions.
Climate change deniers including
Liberal and National Party politicians are quick to claim that climate change
has nothing to do with drought. It is true that Australia is an extremely dry
continent, and that droughts are regular events in Australia. The question we
need to ask is “Are droughts getting worse and can they be attributed to
climate change?”
While it is
difficult to attribute any one particular weather event to global climate
change caused by anthropogenic greenhouse gasses, the fact that this is
occurring as a broad global trend is now unequivocal, and is very likely caused
by humanity. For many key parameters, the climate system is already moving
beyond the patterns of natural variability within which our society and economy
have thrived, including global surface mean temperature, sea-level rise, ocean
acidification and extreme climatic events. This century we can expect
temperature rises of between 1.8 and 4.0 deg C and sea level rises 0.5-1.4m
above 1990 levels. (1)
Since 1950, most of southern
Australia has experienced substantial rainfall declines with below average
falls across the south-west since 1970, and south-eastern Australia since 1997.
From the 1970s, late autumn and early winter rainfall has decreased by 15% in
south-east Australia, and Western Australia’s south-west region has experienced
a 15% decline in cool season rainfall. This year’s rainfall over southern
Australia is the second lowest on record.
A group of scientists at Melbourne
University reconstructed 800 years of seasonal rainfall patterns across the
Australian continent. They conclude that parts of northern Australia are wetter
than ever before, and that major droughts of the late 20th and early
21st centuries are likely without precedent over the past 400 years (2)
We are seeing an increase in the
intensity and frequency of hot days and heatwaves in Australia, exacerbating
drought conditions. On the other hand we are also seeing increasing intensity
in tropical cyclones and damaging heavy rainfall events in northern Australia.
Only the climate change deniers
refuse to see that there is a problem. The question is “What do we do about it?”
What
Can Farmers Do?
Farmers need to reject the climate change
deniers in the ranks of the Liberal and National Parties, as well as those in
their own farmer organisations. They need to get behind groups such as Farmers
For Climate Action (www.farmersforclimateaction.org.au). This group is calling for immediate action on
climate change. They seek to introduce climate-smart farming practices and more
research and development to allow farmers to adapt to changing climatic
conditions.
FFCA advocates moving Australia’s
energy system away from fossil fuels and towards renewable energy. They are
active in the “Stop Adani Alliance.” They have been campaigning against the
Queensland Government’s proposed grant of an unlimited free 60 year water
licence to Adani. They are also campaigning against the Government’s compulsory
acquisition of farmland for Adani’s railway.
Other groups such as “Lock the
Gate” are active against coal seam gas mining and fracking. They too need all
the support that farmers and all Australians who care for the environment can
give them.
(1) G
Horton et al, “Drought, drying and climate change: Emerging health issues for
ageing Australians in rural areas. “ Australian
Journal of Ageing, Vol 29, No 1, March 2010.
(2)
M.
Freund et al , “Recent Australian
Droughts May Be The Worst in 800 years.” The
Conversation, 2 May, 2018.
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