Study Predicts Hotter,
Drier Australia
November 06, 2006 — By Michael Perry, Reuters
SYDNEY — Australia's climate is now
permanently hotter and drier, and the country faces major temperature
rises and significantly less rainfall by 2070, scientists said on Monday.
The projections, described by one official as a "frightening picture",
were published as Australia grapples with its worst drought in 100 years
and follows Prime Minister John Howard's recent conversion to the view
that global warming is real.
The government's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organisation (CSIRO) predicted in a report that rainfall in parts of
eastern Australia were forecast to drop 40 percent by 2070, with a seven
degree Celsius rise in temperature.
It said that by 2030 the risk of bushfires will be higher, droughts more
severe and rainfall and stream run-off lower.
By 2070, the town of Gunnedah in western New South Wales state will have
more than 100 days a year with temperatures over 35 Celsius (95 degrees
Fahrenheit) and Walgett may have 83 days a year above 40 Celsius (104
Fahrenheit), said the report.
Such constantly high temperatures could turn normally drought-proof green
pastures into brown dustbowls.
"The CSIRO research paints a frightening picture. That's why we need a
national approach to climate change," said New South Wales state Premier
Morris Iemma.
Howard, although now conceding the existence of climate change, still
refuses to sign the Kyoto Protocol aimed at lower greenhouse gas
emissions, arguing it is flawed because it does not include big polluters
India, China and the United States.
Many scientists say carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels and methane
from agriculture is causing the atmosphere to warm. The Kyoto Protocol
obliges about 40 nations to cut emissions by at least 5.2 percent below
1990 levels by 2008-12.
With an Australian election due within a year and the environment emerging
as a major political issue, Howard recently announced a number of green
projects and called for Asia-wide emissions trading as part of a planned
"new-Kyoto".
PERMANENT CHANGE
Professor Mike Young, a water management expert at the University of
Adelaide and a member of the Wentworth Group of scientists, said that even
when the five-year-long drought breaks Australia will not return to
cooler, wetter conditions.
"It is the worst type of drought because after the drought we are not
expecting to return back to the old regime," he said.
"The last half of last century was much wetter. What we seem to have done
is ... built Australia on the assumption that it was going to be wetter,
and we haven't been prepared to make the change back to a much drier
regime."
Young said Australia's present water usage, both rural and city, was no
longer sustainable. He said water usage must become more efficient and
users must pay a realistic price for water.
Sydney's water supply dam is now only at 40 percent of its capacity. With
forecasts that dams on the country's main Murray-Darling river system
could run out of water within six months, Howard has called for a water
summit on Tuesday.
The average inflow of water into the Murray River, which feeds Australia's
major growing food belt, is 11,000 gigalitres a year. In the last five
months it has received less than 600 gigalitres, with forecasts for the
year of 1,000 gigalitres.
Green groups and politicians want irrigators, particularly rice and cotton
farmers, to return water to the Murray-Darling.
"Urgent action is needed to address the water crisis," said Greens Senator
Rachel Siewert. "There will be no water for some rural towns this summer."
Source: Reuters