02.02 am, Thursday May 24 2012

Expert predicts more mega-bushfires

18:30 AEDT Tue Feb 10 2009
By Cathy Alexander
VIEWS: 0
| FLOCKS: 0
| comments0 comments so far
Fire devastation in Jeeralong
Weather experts say Australians should brace for mega-bushfires as climate change takes hold.

Also on
Corby 'deal'People smuggler swap denied 'No choice'Grandma 'shoots grandson dead' Bomb panic'Device' put inside passenger 'Too hot'Woman 'fired for good looks' Grease bombEggs and bacon in roll heaven Chelsy DavyChelsy girlHarry says she's 'the one'

Australians should brace themselves for more mega-bushfires as climate change takes hold, a leading scientist warns.

Professor Will Steffen from the Australian National University (ANU) says climate change is expected to cause hotter, drier weather in areas like Victoria.

That means fires are more likely to spread - and the fuel could be tinder-like when they do.

"Events like this, severe heatwaves and severe fires, become more likely with an underlying change in climate," Prof Steffen, who is director of ANU's Climate Change Institute, told AAP.

"People better prepare for the fact that the risk is increasing ... (for) more frequent extreme events that are related to temperature, like heatwaves, like bushfires."

He noted Victoria had extremely high temperatures during last weekend's horrific bushfires, and that heatwaves were more likely due to climate change.

Prof Steffen could not say if the Victorian bushfires were caused by climate change.

It was difficult to blame any single weather event on greenhouse gas emissions, he said.

But he said climate change was heating up Australia.

"Our climate is getting warmer, as it is in the rest of the world, and I think there's no doubt about that," Prof Steffen, an expert in terrestrial ecosystems and climate change, said.

There was a strong scientific consensus that the bulk of warming since 1950 had been caused by increased greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, he said.

Prof Steffen said climate change could increase the frequency of mega-bushfires from once every 100-200 years, to once every 20-30 years.

Victorian Premier John Brumby has linked the recent fires to global warming.

"There's clear evidence now that the climate is becoming more extreme," he said on Monday.

Australian Greens leader Bob Brown said extreme bushfires would become more frequent if the world failed to act on climate change.

"Global warming is predicted to make this sort of event happen 25 per cent, 50 per cent more," Senator Brown said on Sunday.

Greenpeace climate campaigner Trish Harrup pointed to the Victorian bushfires as she called for Australia to beef up its promise to cut greenhouse gas emissions by five to 15 per cent by 2020.

"The scale of this catastrophe, coupled with severe floods in Queensland, should be a clarion call to politicians for the need to begin treating climate change as a national emergency," Ms Harrup said.

 

Most popular

 Vic sex worker passed on disease: policePolice fear for the health of clients of a Melbourne male sex worker who allegedly knowingly passed on a serious disease.
 Host calls woman 'dreadful' to her faceUS talk show host Anderson Cooper told self-described "Human Barbie" Sarah Burge she was "dreadful" to her face in front of a studio audience as he cut short an interview.
 'Bomb' written on drink can aborts flightA Mauritius-bound plane returned to Melbourne after a soft drink can was found on board with the word 'bomb" written on it.
 Michael Clarke and bride tweet Indian outfit picAustralian cricket captain Michael Clarke and his new bride Kyly Boldy have tweeted a picture of themselves in traditional Indian wedding attire.
 UK mum, 31, sent home hours before deathPathologists are yet to determine what killed an English dance teacher who collapsed and died hours after being sent home from hospital.
 Grandmother 'shoots grandson eight times'A 74-year-old grandmother has been charged with murder after allegedly fatally shooting her grandson eight times in the chest as he called 911.
 WA warden 'wrestled boys in underpants'The warden of another WA state-run student boarding house has been revealed as a child sex abuser.
 Vic siege man charged over armed robberyA man has faced court charged with making threats to kill, after a 44-hour siege in Melbourne that ended in the wee hours of the morning.
 Woman says she was fired for being 'too hot'A US woman is suing the lingerie company she used to work at, claiming they fired her for being "too hot".
 Poor mobile coverage gets bad receptionPoor mobile coverage across the nation is the biggest telecommunications concern for regional Australians, an independent review says.
Be our fan on Facebook
Most Recommended
You need the latest version of Flash Player.
Enjoy the most vivid content on the web
Watch video without extra features
Interact with applications on your favourite sites
Upgrade now

page complete