Skip to content
Emergency Services, Environment

CALAMITY HOTSPOTS: THE QLD COMMUNITIES HIT HARDEST BY DISASTERS

Emergency Leaders for Climate Action 3 mins read

A NEW REPORT REVEALS Queensland communities are among the hardest hit by climate-fuelled disasters in recent years. Communities in Cook and Carpentaria were slammed by extreme weather events over this time, with 28 disasters occuring in Cook, and 25 in Carpentaria.

 

Climate-fuelled extreme weather events are to blame for hundreds of thousands of displacements in Australia. Across the country, Australians have been forced to move almost a quarter of a million times due to extreme weather events. 

 

 

The report (attached) by Emergency Leaders for Climate Action, ‘Too close to home’, recommends crucial steps the Australian Government needs to take to better protect communities from climate-fuelled disasters, and makes the case for why more investment into community preparedness is critical. 

 

Greg Mullins AO AFSM, Founder of Emergency Leaders for Climate Action said: “As communities around the country face more fires and floods, fuelled by climate pollution, it is inconceivable that the Federal Opposition would seek to delay necessary climate action for the sake of a false solution like nuclear.

 

“Nuclear can’t drive down climate pollution fast enough, which endangers millions of Australian lives and homes, and flies in the face of the lived experience of Australians, including those who serve to keep us safe. 

 

“Firefighters and other emergency responders are being pushed to their limits by increasingly frequent, intensifying disasters, fuelled by climate pollution. They are tireless in their efforts to protect Australians but, as we saw during the Black Summer bushfires and subsequent record floods, they’re regularly being overwhelmed by climate fuelled disasters. 

 

“We must make urgent cuts to climate pollution in order to protect communities facing worsening impacts right now, and to ensure our kids and grandkids are kept safe from even worse disasters. 

 

“It is past time we tilt the balance from responding to disasters to preventing and preparing for them, and building community capacity, rather than relying solely on responses by emergency services. Unprepared communities lose more homes and lives than prepared communities. We need more resources to be available so people in our communities can keep each other safe when disasters strike.”

 

Sean O’Rourke, Director of Emergency Leaders for Climate Action said: “Australia’s investment in disaster preparedness is no match for the fury of climate-fuelled disasters. After years of neglect from previous Australian governments, our efforts to protect vulnerable communities from climate harm is just getting off the ground. 

 

“We can do so much more to help communities understand the risks they’re up against, and to manage those risks. In fact, we must – lives depend on it. Everything we do this decade determines how safe our kids and grandkids are from supercharged fires, floods and storms.” 

 

Rebecca McNaught, Research Fellow at the University Centre for Rural Health in Lismore, President of South Golden Beach Community Resilience Team based in NSW’s Northern Rivers said: “We are a nation of people who care for our neighbours in times of crisis. Through floods and fires, we’ve watched communities provide food and support for each other, and we've seen innovative community-led initiatives meet needs in the wake of climate-fuelled disasters. These efforts need to be better acknowledged and resourced. 

 

“Communities have lost homes, animals and people they love to climate-fuelled disasters. Supporting communities to prepare for disasters benefits their individual and collective wellbeing. By better resourcing efforts to get prepared and protect one another, communities can move from a place of trauma and fear, to healing and hope.”

 

For interviews please contact Lydia Hollister-Jones on 0448 043 015 or lydia.hollister-jones@climatecouncil.org.au. You can also contact the Climate Council media team on 0485 863 063. 

 

The Climate Council is Australia’s leading community-funded climate change communications organisation. We provide authoritative, expert and evidence-based advice on climate change to journalists, policymakers, and the wider Australian community.

 

For further information, go to: climatecouncil.org.au

Or follow us on social media: facebook.com/climatecouncil and twitter.com/climatecouncil

Media

More from this category

  • Energy, Environment
  • 07/09/2024
  • 14:30
Solutions for Climate Australia

Another Hunter Valley earthquake sounds alarms on Coalition’s nuclear scheme

The third earthquake in two weeks in NSW’s Hunter Valley today highlights the serious questions about the Liberal National Coalition’s plans for nuclear reactors they are still refusing to answer, says Solutions for Climate Australia. The earthquake's epicentre was again very close to the existing Liddell power station, where the Coalition aims to build at least one nuclear reactor. Solutions for Climate Australia Senior Campaigner Elly Baxter said the Coalition has not answered the many questions already raised about safety, emergency response, radioactive waste and water availability at the site. “Five of the seven sites proposed by the Coalition as…

  • Environment, Political
  • 07/09/2024
  • 01:00
Sustainable Population Australia

SPA pays tribute to a great environmentalist: Dr John Coulter

Sustainable Population Australia (SPA) is today paying tribute to its Patron and former senator for South Australia, Dr John Coulter, who died yesterday in…

  • Contains:
  • Energy, Environment
  • 06/09/2024
  • 09:00
Rewiring Australia

Rewiring Australia’s Dr Saul Griffith in Queensland for Electrify Everything events in Brisbane and on the Gold Coast

Rewiring Australia co-founder and Chief Scientist Dr Saul Griffith, affectionately known as “Dr Electrify” is heading to Queensland in September for two Electrify Everything events in Brisbane and on the Gold Coast. Dr Griffith will outline his research and visionary blueprint, painting an inspiring yet practical picture of empowered local communities acting collectively, and households being placed first in energy and climate policy. As Queensland gears up for its state election in October, there has been keen interest in how local Queenslanders can benefit from and support the transition to solar-powered electric homes and businesses. Dr Griffith will be joined…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.