Flashpoint and the fire royal commission

November 3, 2020
Issue 
Climate rally, Sydney, February 2020. Photo: Peter Boyle

The final report of the was handed down on October 28. It acknowledges what environmental groups,聽, , and the among many others, have been saying for decades.

Increasingly catastrophic weather events 鈥 including fires like the 2019-20 Black Summer disaster 鈥 were fuelled by climate change.

The voices demanding that government takes real action on greenhouse gas emissions reductions and genuine renewable energy options are getting louder.聽The Liberal-National Party in Queensland has just learned the hard way what it can cost, electorally, to ignore growing concern in the community around climate change. 聽

The major parties are repeatedly polling as 鈥渙n the nose鈥, nationally, for fence sitting on environmentally destructive, lobbyist-driven projects the community does not want 鈥 such as the Adani coal project in the Galilee Basin.

The NSW Nationals鈥 dummy spit over the state鈥檚 koala management plan, the 98% community opposition to Santos in Narrabri, the public blowback over the massive fail that is the Murray Darling Basin Plan are all examples of government policy lagging way behind the democratic discourse.

This, combined with years of drought, followed by the bushfires, reveal the realities of climate change can no longer be ignored. 聽

After years of under-funding and political inaction, the 2019-2020 summer exposed so many failings that Prime Minister Scott Morrison 鈥 deeply unpopular for languishing on the beach in Hawaii while Australia burned 鈥 was finally compelled to call the royal commission.

The elephant in the room

The commission鈥檚 report expressly names climate change as increasing the risk and impact of natural disasters and states that global warming beyond the next 20 to 30 years 鈥渋s largely dependent on the trajectory of greenhouse gas emissions鈥. 聽

Inexplicably, there was no consequential recommendation advising the government to take urgent action to significantly cut those same greenhouse gas emissions, move to renewable energy and commit to net zero emissions at any date.

Many of , as Prime Minister Scott Morrison found out on a recent call with Boris Johnston.

Some argue that mitigating global warming by reducing greenhouse gas emissions was never in the Terms of Reference.聽This is technically true, yet 鈥渁sserting whether or not climate change is real鈥 is not in the Terms of Reference either.

Why did the commission so directly address the symptom that is climate change, but not the underlying root cause? 聽

What the terms do clearly focus on are 鈥渉azard reduction鈥 and 鈥渞isk mitigation鈥.聽Whichever way you spin it, emissions reduction comes squarely under both.

Overview of report

The report takes into account a huge amount of input, both new and pre-existing.聽Also in keeping with its Terms of Reference there are limited pre-emptive recommendations, focusing mainly on after-care and the practical improvements needed for disaster management frameworks, budgets and resources.

It outlines how to better help communities prepare for, adapt to and build resilience to climate change.聽

This includes Australia obtaining and maintaining a water-bombing fleet; boosting other fire fighting capabilities; telecommunication coverage; information and resource sharing between the states and territories and the federal government; nationally consistent disaster danger ratings, warning systems, their public information and education programs; and Indigenous fire-management practices in risk mitigation.

Importantly, streamlined access to emergency and recovery funding was targeted: the current system proven to be problematic to recent bushfire victims.

Environment-related recommendations

There are four recommendations relating to environmental issues and one relating to climate risk.

Recommendation 4.5 advises state and territory governments to produce 鈥渄ownscaled climate projections鈥 for use by relevant disaster decision makers.聽They should be 鈥渦nderpinned by an agreed common core set of climate trajectories and timelines鈥, it states.

Recommendation 14.1 recommends 鈥渄evelop[ing] close to real-time, nationally consistent air quality information鈥 for health advice, education and guidance 鈥 presumably a database. 聽

Recommendation 16.1 reiterates the need for greater consistency and collaboration in the collation, storage, access and provision of data on the distribution and conservation status of Australian flora and fauna.

Recommendation 18.1 of Indigenous land and fire management and natural disaster resilience states that all levels of government should 鈥渆ngage further鈥 with Traditional Owners to explore the relationship between Indigenous land and fire management and natural disaster resilience.

The notes that there are 139 Indigenous land and sea management projects in train across the country.聽It is well past time their expertise was properly integrated.

Australia鈥檚 track record for implementing royal commission recommendations is far from exemplary.聽This one is also going to be challenging, especially given the government鈥檚 denial of the seriousness of climate change and it ongoing support for billions of taxpayer dollars to continue to go to the fossil fuel industry.

Nor does the government鈥檚 track record on apps, database management and rogue algorithms auger well for the centralised information objectives.

Add the fact that, historically, any leader who has mentioned emission reduction, or a renewables-focused energy policy, and it is easy to feel despondent. 聽

But with the Greens taking seats in Queensland, a growing public pushback against coal seam gas, increased public support for meaningful climate action and even some , it suddenly feels less like a losing battle.

Maybe, the need for real action on climate change is finally starting to cut through. If we and the plants, animals, air and water that give us life are to survive, it is a fight we simply have to win.

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