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Wednesday 29 October 2008
by: Marian Wilkinson and Ben Cubby, The Sydney Morning Herald
Sydney's
iconic beaches, coastal houses, commercial property and roads will be
threatened by rising sea levels by 2050, while the city's temperature
is expected to rise by at least 2 degrees, a new scientific study,
launched by the Premier, Nathan Rees, reveals.
"Today, the science is in for Sydney," Mr Rees said
yesterday as he proclaimed the influence of the climate sceptic and
former treasurer Michael Costa at an end in NSW.
"The Costa era of ambiguity around this issue is over.
Along with the rest of the NSW public, I recognise that climate change
is a reality and that the NSW Government needs to prepare for it," the
Premier said. "There is no longer a climate-change sceptic at the
centre of government decision-making in this state".
The study commissioned by the NSW Department of Climate
Change, and adopted by the Government, was carried out by the
University of NSW and uses research from the United Nations' peak
scientific body, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
It examines the effect of climate change on the greater
Sydney metropolitan region from the Central Coast to Wollongong, along
with other regions in rural NSW. The full state study is expected to be
released in January.
"We've used world's best science to understand what will
happen in different parts of this state so we can start planning now
for the future," Mr Rees said. "We will all have to change the way we
live to some degree."
The study finds that bushfires are likely to be more
intense while rainfall may become more erratic, creating water
shortages. But while winter rains decline, intense summer rain in parts
of Sydney could increase flash flooding.
This, combined with higher temperatures, is expected to put the state's emergency services and health services under stress.
The study has enormous implications for urban planning,
building standards and flood-risk mapping as well as agriculture. It
finds by 2050 the expected sea level rise is likely to be 40
centimetres, reaching 90 centimetres by 2100. While the figure sounds
deceptively small, a one-centimetre sea-level rise can cause erosion
effects of up to one metre.
The projections would mean changes to the Sydney coastline,
including the harbour, Parramatta River and the Georges River, said
Professor Andy Short of the University of Sydney's coastal studies
unit.
"Beaches with a low gradient like Narrabeen, Dee Why and Curl Curl are going to be the most heavily affected," he said.
This sea-level rise would also affect river estuaries and
bays. As seawater invades estuaries, fish populations are likely to
decline and water birds disappear.
A senior scientist with the Department of Climate Change,
Peter Smith, told the forum, "Where you've got a hard promenade at
beaches like Manly, you can expect a reduction in beach shape and the
actual width of the beach. In some cases, beaches will possibly
disappear."
The temperature rises, coupled with more erratic rainfall,
are expected to hit southern NSW hardest, said Gary Allan, the project
leader for climate risk management in the NSW Department of Primary
Industries in NSW.
"In the Riverina, we have to consider the possibility of
fairly significant change to agricultural practices as we have known
them," he said.
Mr Rees said he would strongly support the federal Carbon
Pollution Reduction Scheme and bring forward spending on energy
efficiency measures to cut greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate
change.
He said a proposed $63 million energy efficiency program to
help low-income households cut their emissions would start next month
in Orange and Bathurst, and move to Sydney early next year.
The plan, which had been flagged by the previous climate
minister, Verity Firth, will affect up to 200,000 people, including
pensioners, public-housing tenants and Aborigines.
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