Climate forecast for Australia: hot days, higher fire risk, more severe droughts

State of the climate report predicts that, by 2030, Australia’s temperature will have risen by between 0.6C and 1.5C
Paul Farrell theguardian.com 3 Mar 14;

Lithgow bushfires Rural Fire Service volunteers unsuccessfully try to save a house from a bushfire north of Lithgow in October 2013. Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP

Australia’s temperature will continue to warm leading to decreases in rainfall in southern Australia, increasing numbers of hot days and higher fire risks and more severe drought conditions, according to the 2014 State of the Climate report.

The report is a joint undertaking by the CSIRO and Bureau of Meteorology, and found that Australia’s temperature is predicted to rise by 0.6C to 1.5C by 2030; in comparison, between 1910 and 1990 the temperature rose by 0.6C.

Both the length of the fire season and the risk of extreme fire weather has also increased since the 1970s. The level of rainfall has seen a gradual decline, with a 17% drop in winter rainfall in south-west Australia since 1970, which the report predicts will lead to more frequent and severe droughts.

“While natural variability likely plays a role, a range of studies suggest ozone depletion and global warming are contributing to circulation and pressure changes, most clearly impacting on the south-west. Uncertainties remain, and this is an area of ongoing research. ” the report says.

The report says a reduction in global greenhouse gas emissions would “increase the chance of constraining future global warming”.

“The duration, frequency and intensity of heatwaves have increased across many parts of Australia, based on daily temperature records since 1950, when coverage is sufficient for heatwave analysis. Days where extreme heat is widespread across the continent have become more common in the past twenty years,” the report says.

The chief executive officer of the Climate Institute, John Connor, said the report showed the government needed to accept the risks of failing to act on climate change.

“The government’s self-identified ‘primary advisers’ on climate, BoM and CSIRO today clearly linked carbon emissions, climate change, fire and drought in stark contrast to their own reluctance to do so,” he said.

“This report from the government’s primary climate advisers should put an end to the reluctance of our political and business leaders to accept the risks and costs to Australia of inadequate climate action.”