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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Thursday, 30 April 2015
Climate change will significantly affect Australians’ health, report finds
Report by the Australian Academy of Science warns extreme weather
events will contribute to the spread of disease and disrupt food and
water supplies
The Hume Dam in north-east Victoria during a dry spell. The report warns
of more frequent droughts, heatwaves and storms as the climate warms.
Photograph: Alamy
Climate change
will have significant repercussions for Australians’ health as warming
temperatures fuel extreme weather events, help spread disease and
disrupt food and water supplies, according to a report backed by the
country’s peak scientific and medical bodies.
The Climate change challenges to health report, released by the Australian Academy of Science,
warns that vulnerable people, particularly the sick, elderly and poor,
will “suffer disproportionately from the worst impacts of climate
change.”
The report notes that the world will have warmed by “at least 2C
compared with pre-industrial times” by the end of the century, leading
to heatwaves, droughts, storms and floods that will “lead directly to
loss of life and will have a negative effect on the mental wellbeing of
communities.”
Instances of disease, such as those borne by mosquitoes, are expected
to increase as the climate warms, while high temperatures and disrupted
water supplies will affect crops. In addition, the warming and
acidification of oceans will affect Australia’s fisheries.
The report, which is backed by the Australian Medical Association
(AMA), makes eight key recommendations, including programs to prevent
health impacts upon the sick, the elderly, poor and those in remote
communities.
It also calls for a new National Centre for Disease Control and a new
National Food and Water Commission, to coordinate Australia’s adaption
to a changed climate. Funding in agricultural research and development
should be increased while greenhouse gas emissions should be cut, the
report recommends.
The report notes that the IPCC has “high confidence” that Australia
will have more frequent heatwaves and bushfire-prone conditions this
century, warning that extreme weather is a “particularly serious health
issue for Australia”, with the number of heatwave-related deaths in
Australian cities set to double over the next 40 years.
Instances of disease, such as those borne by mosquitoes, are also
expected to increase as the climate warms. Photograph: Kerstin
Waurick/Getty Images
Meanwhile, Australia could become more susceptible to vector-borne
diseases, such as dengue, as well as respiratory diseases as people
spend more time indoors avoiding extreme heat.
Conflicts
over water in regional areas could flare, the report warns, while
Australia could face migrants from Pacific islands threatened by sea
level rises. Livelihoods in farming, fishing and tourism could be at
risk, potentially deepening inequalities and causing mental health
problems.
AMA president, associate professor Brian Owler, said the report
provided compelling evidence of the significant threat that climate
change posed to worldwide health.
“There will always be a few outliers, but the overwhelming bulk of
the scientific community, including most doctors, think we are well
beyond debating whether climate change is an issue,” he said.
“The more groups that voice their concerns over these kinds of
issues, the more compelling it is for governments to take action.”
“This is not something that can be subject to political debate.
That’s the whole problem with climate change, it’s a great frustration
to many people that this whole climate change debate has been hijacked
as a political debate, and unless we get past that and start looking at
facing consequences and mitigating the effects of climate change, we’ll
struggle to respond to its effects.”
Dr Ailie Gallant, one of the contributors to the report, said there
is still some uncertainty over the severity of problems posed by climate
change but that adaptation around food and water will be required.
“There is a broad drying trend in the south of Australia, so the type
of crops we grow may have to be altered and our diet … may need to
change,” she said. “There are all kinds of adaptation strategies which
will mean that the things that make up our food basket will need to
change.”
Bruce Armstrong, emeritus professor of public health at the
University of Sydney and fellow of the Academy of Science, said parts of
Australia currently unaffected by mosquito-borne diseases could soon
start experiencing them as warmer weather pushed them south.
“We will experience more extremes in weather like we had in Sydney
recently and also more heatwaves and more fire events, all of which have
the potential for major health impacts,” Armstrong, a co-author of the
report, said.
“We need to implement strategies to warn people well in advance so
they know what to do, and secondly we need to ensure we can maintain
health services and care for those who are isolated and affected.”
It would be very difficult to provide those responses without the
support of the federal government, he said. It was essential the
government release climate science and health data, he said, so that
researchers could analyse the impact of climate events in real time.
“Because of the complexities of the state and federal health systems,
and the fact that diseases don’t respect borders, we need stronger
mechanisms to record what’s going on, and to monitor and research it,”
he said.
“That’s not going to happen without the support of governments. I hope this report will be a nudge in that direction.”
Projections released by the CSIRO and Bureau of Meteorology in January
show that Australia is set to have an average annual temperature that
is 1.3C warmer in 2030 compared to the average experienced between 1986
and 2005. This will be accompanied by more extreme droughts and less
rainfall in the southern portion of the country.
Beyond this, Australia could warm by more than 5C by 2090 if little
effort is made to cut the amount of greenhouse gases entering the
atmosphere.
Australia, which experienced its warmest and third warmest years on
record in 2013 and 2014, respectively, has already warmed by 0.9C since
1910.
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