Australia's Decade of Burning Environmental Apathy

Opinion
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Byย Edward Cavanough.ย This story originally appeared in The Nation and is republished here as part of Covering Climate Now, a global journalism collaboration to strengthen coverage of the climateย story.

The country is paying a deadly price for its conservative politiciansโ€™ climateย denialism.ย 

For more than the last three months, Australiaย has burned. Across four states, unstoppable fires exacerbated by climate change ravaged millions of hectares. Some fire fronts stretched acrossย 600 miles. Temperatures exceededย 115ยฐF.

Smoke choked Australiaโ€™s cities, and the Sydney Opera Houseย disappeared behind a brown haze. Children wore face masks as the air quality deteriorated, leading toย canceled sporting eventsย andย mail delivery in Canberra, Australiaโ€™s capital. At least 25ย people died, and many remain missing, not to mention the more than a billion animals and plants incinerated.ย Thousands of peopleย stood under blood-red skies on sandy beaches, awaiting rescue by Australiaโ€™s navy โ€” the largest peacetime evacuation in the countryโ€™sย history.

Christmas neared, the fires worsened, and Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who once flourishedย a lump of coalย during a parliamentary session, relaxed at a beach bar in Hawaii. Heย explained his absenceย in the weakest terms: โ€œI donโ€™t hold a hose, mate,โ€ he said. Less than two weeks later, he hosted a New Yearโ€™s Eveย party at his mansion, watching the fireworks cascade into an ash-filled Sydneyย Harbor.

It was a fitting coda to a decade of climate apathy from Australiaโ€™s ruling class, a period when the countryโ€™s leaders went from beingย global crusaders to villainsย undermining the whole worldโ€™s future. With the help of a cadre of climate skeptics, Australia presented itself as far less capable than it actually is, advancing specious arguments about its international insignificance. Australia once aspired to moral and political leadership on the global stage: It helpedย end South African apartheid, mobilized the effort toย protect Antarcticaโ€™s environment, and helpedย expand the G-20โ€™s missionย in the wake of the global financial crisis. But on climate change, it has dropped theย ball.

It wasnโ€™t always this way. In 2009 the countryโ€™s Labour government attempted to legislateย a mechanismย that, while not perfect, would have seen Australiaโ€™s CO2ย emissions fall year after year. The bill enjoyed brief bipartisan support before Tony Abbott, a climate change denier, took control of the opposition Liberal Party, rejected the bill (along with Australiaโ€™s Greens, who insisted it didnโ€™t go far enough), and began a four-year crusade against climate action. Abbott won the prime ministerโ€™s office in 2013, in part by promising to repeal Labourโ€™s 2011 carbon tax โ€” a proposal that,ย he falsely asserted, would deliver an annual A$550 windfall to every household in the country. His election marked the beginning of years of rising emissions under the Liberalsโ€™ conservativeย rule.

When Abbottโ€™s popularity plummeted, he was replaced by Malcolm Turnbull, who, in turn, was ousted by his party for his attempts to implement a mostly reasonable climateย policy.

Morrison took the reins in 2018, casting himself as the voice of the โ€œquiet Australians.โ€ One of his first decisions as prime minister was to tear up the countryโ€™s only bipartisan road map for reducing carbon emissions. Heโ€™s argued against an electric vehicle policy and even ignored warnings about the dangers of the coming fireย season.

Morrisonโ€™s complacency is rooted in an ideology that we might call Australian exemptionalism, the comforting fallacy that Australia is exempt from global responsibility on climate because it isnโ€™t big enough to make a difference. Itโ€™s a belief manufactured by the climate deniers, who ignore Australiaโ€™s vulnerability even when crises occur. Because the country contributes โ€œonlyโ€ 1.3ย percent of global emissions,ย they argue, it is statistically off the hook. And any progressive climate activism isย derided, then weaponized to stoke economicย anxieties.

This can only end poorly, for Australia and the world. Australia in particular canโ€™t afford unchecked climate change. As droughts intensify, its capacity to produce enough food shrinks. As the Great Barrier Reef dies, its tourist appeal diminishes, and its coastal population is exposed to a dangerous sea-levelย rise.

Whatโ€™s more, Australia has everything to gain from the opportunities presented by a carbon neutral world. It isย richly endowedย with resources like rare earth elements, lithium, iron ore, and cobalt โ€” vital components in the manufacture of wind turbines, batteries, and solar panels. Its vast expanses are bathed in sunshine year round. A reasonable Australia would aspire to limitless clean energy, powering industry and creating high-wageย jobs.

But these opportunities are merely inconvenient truths for the politicians who spent a decade belittling the need for climate action, many of whom are ultimately in the service of a coal and gas lobbyย whose members emit more carbonย than Australiaโ€™s entire domesticย economy.

Despite the raging fires, a change of course now by Australiaโ€™s conservative leaders remains improbable. To do so would be to confess that the past decade of climate inaction was a catastrophic miscalculation. So Morrison will keep leading a quiet Australia โ€” a nation unwilling to step up to the challenges at hand, resistant to the opportunities of a decarbonized global economy, and voiceless on the burning issue of ourย time.

Main image:ย Australia’s Orroral Valley Fire viewed from Tuggeranong on the evening of Januaryย 28, 2020.ย Credit:ย Nick-D,ย CC BYSAย 4.0

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