Tuesday, February 10, 2009

A CHANGE IS GONNA TO COME

Last week, in the midst of Adelaide's record heatwave, I spent a day with a south coast farmer whose family have worked their patch of country for three or four generations. Over the years they've seen pretty much everything - droughts, floods, fires, the works. But after the experience of the past 5 years they are having to radically rethink how they look after the farm and how they keep water up to their stock. They will need - at considerable cost - to install a whole new regime to secure their water supply and keep the farm going.
One of the key points about climate change is not just the computer predications about gradual global warming by a degree here or there, or sea level rises over decade or three. The other dimension to climate change is that our seasons will turn ever more unpredictable. So even when farmers get a year of 'average rainfall', the rains come in a brief flurry, followed by several dry months which means there's no decent growing season for crops or pastures.
At the same time, this more erratic climate hits us with more frequent and severe events like floods and storms and sudden bursts of wild weather - including extreme temperatures and winds, akin to those that drove the current fires in Victoria.
Everyone suddenly wants answers to questions about natural catastrophes. People want to know how we can learn from what has happened. All the usual responses are there - who to blame, what went wrong, why did this happen and so on.
No one can say for certain that the severity of the weather that fuelled what happened in Victoria was due to man-made climate change - although some commentators are ready to beat that drum. Given the huge grief process that's unfolding - with all the natural numbness, anger, despair etc - trying to fit in a public argument about the role of climate change does seem premature.
That said, you have to wonder, at least in private.

2 comments:

Denis Wilson said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Denis Wilson said...

Sorry for previous hiccup.
Trying again.
For the individual landholder, like your friends, Climate Change is hard, but they probably do need to try to modify their farming techniques.
On the macro -level debate, (relevant to Victoria, now) I take a hard line. People ought not live in tall Eucalypt forests - for the "lifestyle". It shows a lack of understanding of the power of nature.
Nothing of this last week's events was unpredictable.
State Emergency people have predicted that weather events such as we have had would occur.
Denis