Australia Wildfires Caused Partly By Global Warming, Says Expert

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ROHAN SULLIVAN | February 10, 2009 01:35 PM EST | AP

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Embers glow on a small stump among blackened trees at Chum Creek, near Healseville, north east of Melbourne, Australia Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2009. Officials believe arson may be behind at least some of the more than 400 fires that tore a destructive path across a vast swath of southern Victoria state over the weekend. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)

SYDNEY — Australia may be getting a glimpse of its globally warmed future.

Experts agreed Tuesday that no one drought, flood or wildfire can be attributed to global warming, but they stressed that the eucalyptus forest and farms of southeastern Australia are becoming warmer, drier and more prone to fire as the planet heats up.

Some say rising temperatures are making Australia's climate more extreme at the edges. Snow will disappear from the few mountains that still have it, the cyclones that batter the topical north could get more powerful and the conditions that set the southeast ablaze could become common.

"The terrible events of the past couple of weeks are, without doubt, partly the result of global warming and the greenhouse effect," said Neville Nicholls, an expert on climate change and wildfires at Australia's Monash University.

Global warming cannot be blamed for starting the hundreds of recent fires _ tens of thousands of such blazes erupt across Australia every fire season, from October to March _ but the effects of climate change exacerbated their ferocity, Nicholls said.

First, a decade of drought has made Australia's wild forests _ known as "the bush" _ tinder dry. Second, a sustained and record-breaking heat wave settled over the region. Lastly, record-smashing temperatures on Saturday topped 117 degrees Fahrenheit (47 degrees Celsius) and combined with winds up to 60 mph (100 kph) to whip fires into furnace-like intensity.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the Nobel Prize-winning team of scientists responsible for advising the United Nations about global warming, says the rise in the atmosphere's temperature could cause water shortages, crop failures, more deaths from heat waves and more severe storms around the world.

In Australia, it means more droughts in the dry south and more flooding in the tropical north. The Great Barrier Reef, the world's largest coral reef system rich in sealife and sensitive to small temperature changes, is in trouble.

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The Australian government's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization concluded in 2007 that the country's average temperature will rise about 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit (1 C) by 2030 and up to 9 degrees F (5 C) by 2070 if greenhouse emissions are not curbed.

An island large enough to be counted as a continent, Australia's climate varies with its landscape. It is home to dry shifting dunes in the desert "red heart," misty Riesling grape-clad hills, and lush monsoonal rain forest and mangrove swamps.

Among the panel's forecasts: Climate change would likely mean less rain, but rainfalls that did occur would be more intense. Drought in the south _ the wheat-, sheep- and cattle-growing food belt _ would be more frequent and fires more common. Cyclones that are a regular feature of the summer months in the north would hit harder.

Even as southeastern Australia sweltered and the fires raged this week, some 60 percent of northeastern Queensland state was covered by floodwaters after weeks of drenching rain from a dying offshore cyclone. Three thousand homes were damaged. No deaths were reported.

While scientists cautioned against attributing the wildfires themselves to global warming, they said changing conditions from rising temperatures are having an impact.

"Australia _ and particularly the southeastern corner of Australia _ is fire prone, so a fire-prone environment coupled with a warmer and drier climate in the future is likely to increase the incidence of this kind of event," said Mark Adams, a wildfire expert at the University of Sydney. "But statistically, we won't be able to prove it for many decades."

Adams said Australia's peculiar ecosystems are particularly susceptible to the effects of climate change. An increase of just one or two degrees would cause snow in Australia to disappear, and its Great Barrier Reef and rainforests are particularly sensitive to warming, he said.

"But I don't think that on the whole Australia is more susceptible than many other _ or indeed any other _ continent," Adams said.

Penny Whetton, leader of the climate change research group at Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, also cautioned against tying the fires too closely to global warming.

"Due to changes in the climate, the high risk of fires has increased and will increase," she said. "But that is different than saying climate change caused these fires. It's difficult to relate climate change to an individual weather event."

For conservationists, the dry conditions and the devastating fires bolster their campaign to push the world's governments to move faster on reducing emissions of greenhouse gases.

"It's a sobering reminder of the need for this nation and the whole world to act and to put at a priority our need to tackle climate change in a way that politicians have simply been unable or refused to do in past decades," said Sen. Bob Brown of the left-leaning Australian Greens party.

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Associated Press writers Kristen Gelineau in Sydney and Mike Casey in Bangkok, Thailand, contributed to this report.

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On the Net:

IPCC's assessment of Australia and New Zealand: http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/assessment-report/ar4/wg2/ar4-wg2-chapter11.pdf

SYDNEY — Australia may be getting a glimpse of its globally warmed future. Experts agreed Tuesday that no one drought, flood or wildfire can be attributed to global warming, but they stressed t...
SYDNEY — Australia may be getting a glimpse of its globally warmed future. Experts agreed Tuesday that no one drought, flood or wildfire can be attributed to global warming, but they stressed t...
 
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- richsmith I'm a Fan of richsmith 11 fans permalink

Two things are happening with the conflagration in those forests. The fires are pumping CO2 into the atmosphere and the carbon fixers, the trees, are disappearing. Those factors in turn are variables contributing to even greater meteorological disruptions around the world, not just in Australia, but across all the continents. Look at what's happening in Brazil and Indonesia. The same thing, but with even more of a direct assist by human environmental alterations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:53 PM on 02/10/2009
- emily00011 I'm a Fan of emily00011 35 fans permalink

Of course GW is at least in part behind this. The whole flooding in the north, burning in the south is precisely as the models are predicting for Australia.

There is more evidence every week. Avg January temps have risen by 5F in America the past 40 years, making the birds migrate less far south. The purple finch is settling 400 miles north of where it used to for the winter.

So you want to say you have a freezing year this year? great, no one promised you would never have a winter.

I got a plant outside that's had leaves all winter despite living far north of the lower 48, it certainly didn't used to do that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 PM on 02/10/2009
- williamina I'm a Fan of williamina 7 fans permalink

weird

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 PM on 02/10/2009
- Nooooorm I'm a Fan of Nooooorm 3 fans permalink

"Avg January temps have risen by 5F in America the past 40 years"

Can't seem to find any supporting evidence to this assertion the MSNBC articles makes.

Did Hansen provide them with the data?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:00 PM on 02/12/2009
- Chris B I'm a Fan of Chris B 3 fans permalink
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As a resident of Melbourne Australia, I feel disgusted by these flat earthers saying there was no global warming involved. We were warned ages ago. The experts were right. Spot on in fact. Unfortunately, the flat earthers don't believe in science.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:36 PM on 02/10/2009
- williamina I'm a Fan of williamina 7 fans permalink

weird

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:57 PM on 02/10/2009
- SammyD I'm a Fan of SammyD 11 fans permalink

maybe we could send some of the coldest winter on record from the northern hemi

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:22 PM on 02/10/2009
- isis I'm a Fan of isis 17 fans permalink
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It was in the 60s in the midwest today. I don't think we are having the coldest winter on record and even if we are does that mean it's ok to cook Australia? I hope we can get some alternative energy soon. I would be happy to pay more taxes if it went to infrastructure and research.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:53 PM on 02/10/2009
- Anastasia I'm a Fan of Anastasia 81 fans permalink
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My sister lived in Steels Creek up until a year ago and now lives in Alphington. Her former home and vineyards are in ruins as is much of the area. Apparently, parts of the Yarra Valley are like a war zone.

For those of you who think you would like to trade places with the Aussies, check out theage.com.au

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 PM on 02/10/2009
- nnet I'm a Fan of nnet permalink

Chris
is you've live in Melbourne, or even Australia for that matter for longer than 5 minutes, you'll know of the long history of bush fires going back over 100 years. Global warming didn't cause the bushfires, and global warming didn't cause the deaths. Poor land management, urban planning, and arsonists are to blame.

If you want to talk about disgusting, disgust is how I feel that instead of looking at the real issues, people like you simply say "global warming" and that's the end of it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:02 PM on 02/10/2009
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So was 'global warming' to blame for the 1983 'Ash Wednesday', Australia's previous greatest bush-fire tragedy?

Not mentioned in this story but big news downunder are complaints by the actual bushfire victims that 'the greenies' are to blame. New environmental protection laws have prevented residents from clearing scrub, bush, and trees - all of which provided fuel for this tragedy.

But no doubt the Green spin machine will crush that line of enquiry very quickly ...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:31 PM on 02/10/2009
- valkyrie607 I'm a Fan of valkyrie607 106 fans permalink
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Oh, if only there was a green spin machine. This world would be a different place already.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 PM on 02/10/2009
- richsmith I'm a Fan of richsmith 11 fans permalink

You are blooming mad.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:54 PM on 02/10/2009

Oh, just to let our international readers know, Ash Wednesday was the last huge firestorm that most can remember, or recall more like it.
It happened across 2 states, and possibly NSW - not sure, and 71 people died.
Double that died this time.

Our Internatio­nalObserve­r is unlikely to change his mind about 'greenies', but for all the rest of you, this firestorm was different.

Drought/lack of rain, massively hot weather, and lack of fires since 1939 in many of the areas lead to this happening.
The reason we have such conditions, are mostly due to climate change.
The deaths were due to inadequate fire management on properties (due to old information unadapted to current conditions.

One of the biggest reasons is the old chestnut that most Australians don't care to look at. That is, applying european ways of living to a completely different country.

Look at the houses that burnt. The only thing standing are chimneys.
Most of the rubble are corrigated iron sheeting, and ash.

We don't build our houses ecologically or sustainably.
Most don't care to look at that.
Also, a lot of people are either extreme on one end of the other. This anti-greenie state of mind is endemic, but could really be useful when confronted with death, firestorms and destroyed towns.

I would love to see Australians sit and talk about how they could learn about sustainable living, building, land management, and looking at things like permacultu­re.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:56 PM on 02/10/2009
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I agree that it's silly to build homes in dry bushland areas Happyez. The same is true in California when every year we get to witness 'Celebrity Homes!!!" burn down with alarming regularity. And then rebuilt. And then reburnt.

Clearly this whole thread highlights a divide between those who subscribe to Global Climate Change and those who don't. We may not agree on that, but I think we can agree the folly of letting people build in the bush or areas with a high fire risk. You can't fight nature, it will always win in the end.

Ditto for ppl who build in flood plains ...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:40 PM on 02/11/2009

... At the moment, most farmland, like Northern America, is tree-less, barren and full of cows. I doubt that will change.

By the way, in permaculture, there are ways to plant trees that directs wind (and fire) away from houses.

I would be interested to see what will exactly change most Australians minds about how they live in Australia. Also, when the above poster's attitudes will not dominate the thinking of 90% of Australians.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:56 PM on 02/10/2009
- richsmith I'm a Fan of richsmith 11 fans permalink

Have you ever heard of the "Dust Bowl".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 PM on 02/10/2009

All nonsense. It was really God's revenge on Victoria for decriminalizing abortion.

Leader of the evangelical "Catch the Fire Ministry" (sic, or should that be sick?), Pastor Danny Nalliah, claimed he had a dream about raging fires on October 21 last year and that he woke with "a flash from the Spirit of God: that His conditional protection has been removed from the nation of Australia, in particular Victoria, for approving the slaughter of innocent children in the womb".

If you don't believe me check out:

http://www.stuff.co.nz/4844454a12.html

(Why do they give these loonies air-time?)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:27 PM on 02/10/2009
- jake106 I'm a Fan of jake106 4 fans permalink

I don't know that anyone gave them airtime. I am pretty much certain that no one here, other than the extreme anti-religious crowd, had even heard of this guy until you put his link up on the board. Good job! You gave him free advertising.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:33 PM on 02/10/2009
- isis I'm a Fan of isis 17 fans permalink
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Take him away and check his clothes for traces of gasoline. These prophets have a way of making their dreams come true.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:54 PM on 02/10/2009

What a joke! Does people really get paid to write their opinions of what they want to believe!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:07 PM on 02/10/2009
- richsmith I'm a Fan of richsmith 11 fans permalink

You've got to faking this grammar.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 PM on 02/10/2009

You might want to check yours.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:35 PM on 02/11/2009
- UbiVeritas I'm a Fan of UbiVeritas 3 fans permalink

Denier! Denier!

Just kidding. I find it amusing that Hurricane Katrina was blamed on global warming, but the AGWers have been silent about the record-breaking cold winter in the Northern Hemisphere. Can't have it both ways, gang.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:09 PM on 02/10/2009
- Exusian I'm a Fan of Exusian 27 fans permalink

"Warmers" have hardly been silent on the the record-breaking cold winter in *parts* of the Northern Hemisphere, they've been very busy pointing out to people like UV the difference between weather and climate, and the sustained droughts and heat waves taking place in Australia and Argentina at the same time.

You know, the "global" in global warming?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 PM on 02/10/2009
- UbiVeritas I'm a Fan of UbiVeritas 3 fans permalink

Do you believe that Katrina was a direct result of global warming?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:29 PM on 02/10/2009
- Exusian I'm a Fan of Exusian 27 fans permalink

I believe that global warming played a part in creating the conditions, namely very high sea surface temperatures, that made Katrina as powerful as quickly as it did.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:10 PM on 02/10/2009
- richsmith I'm a Fan of richsmith 11 fans permalink

Your grasp of the physics of world meteorology is woefully wanting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:58 PM on 02/10/2009
- valkyrie607 I'm a Fan of valkyrie607 106 fans permalink
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Please, go to dictionary.com and look up "climate." Then look up "weather." You will find that the difference between these two ideas will eliminate a great deal of your confusion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 PM on 02/10/2009
- Krumbum I'm a Fan of Krumbum 6 fans permalink

Who writes these headlines?

None of the experts in the article say this specific fire was caused partially by global warming.

They all go out of there way to say that no specific fire can be tied to global warming but that if current trends continue the average intensity of the fire season will likely increase over the next three decades.

Why be accurate when you can be sensational?

(I think arson was the major contributer to this fire and the damage was increased because more and more people are living in areas that historically burn--the same phenomenon as in California­.)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:31 PM on 02/10/2009
- Exusian I'm a Fan of Exusian 27 fans permalink

Arson as a "contributor" to a fire?

Now there's a nice example of pure spin.

Did arson contribute to making Saturday the hottest day on record?
Did arson contribute to making the past 40 days the driest start to a year on record?
Did arson contribute to creating the longest, driest drought on record?
Did arson contribute to making this the hottest drought on record?

All four records are quoted from an employee of the Australian Bureau of Meteorology here:
http://bravenewclimate.com/2009/02/10/heatwave-update-and-open-letter-to-the-pm/

Arson may have been the source of ignition, but it was not in any way a "contributor" to this fire.

But Global warming was very much a contributor to creating the conditions that allowed this fire to spread so rapidly and be so devastating.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 02/10/2009
- UbiVeritas I'm a Fan of UbiVeritas 3 fans permalink

Exusian! Are you all recovered from your own "personal warming" experience?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 PM on 02/10/2009
- Exusian I'm a Fan of Exusian 27 fans permalink

Yes, thank you, although today is the first day I feel like I'm even approaching "normal."

And you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:12 PM on 02/10/2009
- Krumbum I'm a Fan of Krumbum 6 fans permalink

I don't have any doubts about the reality of climate change. My issue is with the Huffpost continued use of tabloid headlines. The headline clearly says "caused partially by global warming, experts say." The experts in the article say no such thing.

What is the difficultlty with accurate headlines: "Experts say global warming will increase the intensity of future fires"?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:55 PM on 02/10/2009
- nnet I'm a Fan of nnet permalink

Exusian
I suppose then that global warming was to blame for the 83 fires and the fires in the 1930s?

Global warming didn't create the poor land management and urban planning mistakes, we did. Arsonists lit the flames. Global warming had nothing to do with it, in the same way as its 15 degrees here today.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:06 PM on 02/10/2009
- Exusian I'm a Fan of Exusian 27 fans permalink

Ignoring what the science is telling you, plugging your fingers in your ears, and saying "global warming had nothing to do with it" simply does not make it so.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 PM on 02/10/2009
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