Otago Daily Times

Climate risk needs fair response: report

- KATE GUDSELL

THE burden of sealevel rise will weigh on the most vulnerable unless a new approach is developed and legislated, a new report says.

The paper, written by University of Otago Associate Prof Lisa Ellis, is part of research from the Deep South National Science Challenge. It looks at how New Zealand distribute­s the risks of sealevel rise.

It proposes an ‘‘ethically robust’’ policy to adapt to the risks of climate change.

Tens of thousands of buildings, infrastruc­ture including airports, railways, and roads, and more than 100,000 residents are at risk of serious loss and damage associated with sealevel rise within the next century.

Prof Ellis said sealevel rise was entirely predictabl­e, but if New Zealand was proactive about adaptation to climate change, people’s wellbeing would not be threatened.

But she said it was possible existing inequality would be exacerbate­d and the cost of adapting to climate change would rise if the status quo remained.

Her report recommende­d a government resource about adapting to sealevel rise nationwide, so community resilience did not vary with ratepayers’ ability to pay.

At local level the public should be engaged as early and deeply as possible.

Last year, the Ministry for the Environmen­t released guidelines on adaptation for local government.

Prof Ellis said while they were a step in the right direction, they were just guidelines.

Her report recommende­d that government ensured crossregio­nal equality, so communitie­s did not feel unduly punished by proactive councils.

An example of this was if communitie­s chose to build sea walls for protection, there was a risk that beaches ended up getting lost to the engineered protection works.

The report laid out the need to prefund adaptation measures on a national level because it would overcome intergener­ational inequality in the future.

‘‘It’s going to be very difficult for them to have any kind of wellbeing comparable to ours if we don’t prefund adaptation,’’ Prof Ellis said.

It would also overcome inequality among exposed regions, because the ability to respond to sealevel rise depen ded on ratepayer capacity, which varied across New Zealand.

Prof Ellis said it was vital young people were engaged early, as they had the greatest stake in the future.

‘‘It would be a monstrous violation of our duty to them, to exclude them from these decisions, when in fact the decisions will meet them much more than it will meet us.’’

She said often community consultati­on meetings were held during the day and tended to amplify the voices of people who were old and disproport­ionately wealthy, and young, disadvanta­ged people needed representa­tion. — RNZ

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Land loss . . . In October 2015, the coastal cliffs near Kakanui lost a lot of ground. Sea erosion had closed the road several time in previous years.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Land loss . . . In October 2015, the coastal cliffs near Kakanui lost a lot of ground. Sea erosion had closed the road several time in previous years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand