Showing posts with label CSIRO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CSIRO. Show all posts

Tuesday, 4 August 2020

Leadership on climate needed: CSIRO report : Canberra Times (excerpt)


In a technical report about the 2019-20 bushfires commissioned by Prime Minister Scott Morrison, the CSIRO warned climate and disaster risks were growing across Australia. 
The report, tendered to the Royal Commission into National Natural Disaster Arrangements on Monday, described many of the risks as systemic which required "coordinated, system-wide responses beyond emergency and disaster management to address".
"There is growing demand - from society and the financial services
and disaster management sectors in particular - for coordinated action across all economic sectors, government portfolios and levels of decision making to mitigate climate and disaster risks, build resilience and adapt to change," CSIRO said.


#jail climate criminals   #cambioclimatico
Erosion caused by sea level rise
"There are opportunities for a more harmonised, coordinated and collective approach which are hampered by under-developed, fragmented or uncoordinated awareness, understanding, and approaches to 'systemic risk' assessment and management in Australia."


However the high levels of "contestation and disinformation" about climate change meant there were "low levels of public understanding" of the causes and effects of climate and disaster risks. 

Read the complete Canberra Times Aug 4 article by Katie Burgess 


See also:

Names and Locations of the Top 100 People Killing the Planet: The Decolonial Atlas

 

Monday, 31 December 2018

Australian Bureau of Meteorology and CSIRO biennial State of the Climate report.




The Australian Bureau of Meteorology and CSIRO have released their fifth biennial State of the Climate report.

State of the Climate 2018 is the latest biennial snapshot of climate change in Australia. It focuses on observed long-term trends that are happening now and are likely to continue into the near future, as well as significant climate events that have occurred over the past two years. These changes are described through the latest observations from CSIRO and Bureau of Meteorology marine, atmospheric and terrestrial monitoring programs.
The report also summarises the latest climate research from Australia and around the world. This will help inform a range of economic, environmental and social risk assessments and responses by government, industry and communities.

See The Conversation Article

Read more: State of the Climate 2016: Bureau of Meteorology and CSIRO