Media Release.
Mark Butler M.P.
Shadow Minister for
Climate Change and Energy
Today, the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) and
CSIRO released their biennial State of the Climate report. The facts
speak for themselves:
- Australia's climate has warmed in both mean surface air temperature and surrounding sea surface temperature by around 1 °C since 1910.
- There has been an increase in extreme fire weather, and a longer fire season, across large parts of Australia since the 1970s.
- May–July rainfall has reduced by around 19 per cent since 1970 in the southwest of Australia.
- Sea levels have risen around Australia. The rise in mean sea level amplifies the effects of high tides and storm surges.
The extent to which the climate will change later in the century depends on the level of emissions now and into the future.
Emissions started to rise again last year, and the
Government’s own projections from May confirmed that they will be three
per cent higher than 2000 levels in 2020.
If we are to meet our obligations
under the Paris Agreements, and stop our country from suffering
devastating climate change, we need a government that is willing to
acknowledge the challenge and create good policy.
The Government’s policies will not constrain or reduce emissions to 2020, let alone 2030.
Both the Emissions Reduction Fund and Renewable Energy Target finish in 2020. What happens after that?
It’s the question that the international community and the people of Australia are asking the Turnbull Government.
The time for action is now. Our emissions are
growing daily, each year is getting hotter, bushfires are more frequent,
and oceans are rising.
We need strong policy but the Turnbull Government continues to play the waiting game with Australia’s future.
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