Bangkok Post

PM dismisses climate link as wildfires rage

Blazes reported in all Australian territorie­s

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SYDNEY: Australia’s Prime Minister yesterday denied his climate policies had caused unpreceden­ted bushfires ravaging the country and insisted his government was doing enough to tackle global warming.

As dozens of new blazes scorched the countrysid­e and the country’s largest city was cloaked in hazardous smoke, conservati­ve leader Scott Morrison defended his climate record, saying Australia was “doing our bit”.

His comments came after weeks spent refusing to speak about the link between climate change and deadly fires described by the emergency services as unpreceden­ted in number and scale for the early bushfire season.

As more people in the southeast of the country were told to evacuate their homes and schoolchil­dren in Sydney were again forced to play indoors, Mr Morrison dismissed mounting calls for action.

“The suggestion that any way shape or form that Australia — accounting for 1.3% of the world’s emissions ... are impacting directly on specific fire events, whether it is here or anywhere else in the world, that doesn’t bear up to credible scientific evidence,” he told

ABC radio.

Scientists, former fire chiefs and residents touched by bushfires have all drawn the link between this season’s more intense fires and climate change.

Drought, unseasonab­ly hot, dry and windy conditions have fuelled the unpreceden­ted blazes. Scientists believe many of those factors are made worse by rising global temperatur­es.

Yesterday, bushfires burned across every region of Australia with residents in Victoria warned to leave high-risk areas and officials in New South Wales reporting more than 600 homes have been destroyed in recent weeks.

Mr Morrison is facing calls to cut greenhouse gas emissions and rapidly transition to renewable energy — a sensitive debate in light of Australia’s lucrative mining industry.

Australia has signed up to globally agreed climate targets to help limit warming, but its emissions continue to rise and targets are only being met with the use of some creative carbon accounting — using credits gained in past decades.

The country committed to cut emissions to 26-28% below 2005 levels by 2030 under the 2016 Paris climate accord, but emissions have risen every year since then.

And while Australia’s burning of fossil fuels accounts for only a fraction of global emissions, coal dug up Down Under and burned around the world makes the country a major emissions exporter.

Devastatin­g fires along the country’s east coast have claimed six lives since mid-October.

Now the fire danger has moved into states further south, with more than 60 fires breaking out in Victoria yesterday — including five at “emergency” level — after a so-called “Code Red” fire danger was declared for the first time in a decade.

Victoria Emergency Services Minister Lisa Neville said firefighte­rs were battling “some of the worst conditions that you’d expect to see, often in February or March, and we’re seeing them in November”.

“It is incredibly dry, it will continue to get drier as the months go on over this summer, so the conditions we see today are likely conditions that we’ll confront over this summer,” she said.

The Bureau of Meteorolog­y said “large areas” of central and eastern Victoria broke maximum temperatur­e records for November — including in

Melbourne where the mercury reached 40.9 degrees Celsius.

Country Fire Authority chief Steve Warrington earlier told people living in high-risk rural areas to leave for the safety of cities. “We are saying, ‘do not be there, do not be there when a fire occurs, because you will not survive if you are there,’” he said.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? A woman looks at the Harbour Bridge and Sydney’s central business district shrouded in haze yesterday.
BLOOMBERG A woman looks at the Harbour Bridge and Sydney’s central business district shrouded in haze yesterday.

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