Skip to content
Environment, Government Federal

COP31: Australia has a chance to lead on climate, we must seize the opportunity

UNSW Institute for Climate Risk & Response 3 mins read

Collaborative efforts among universities are paving the way for Australian and Pacific governments to successfully host COP31, but there’s a lot of work to do before then, writes Ben Newell, Director of the UNSW Institute for Climate Risk & Response

Next month, Australia is expected to be named as host of the United Nations climate summit in 2026, in partnership with Pacific Island countries. We have just two years to shape an ambitious agenda to manage the risks and opportunities of climate change, and we must start now.

Hosting the world’s climate talks is a unique opportunity for Australia to shine as a climate leader. Realising this potential requires us all to be on a shared pathway – government, industry, and society. Universities can help ensure we maximise our moment in the international climate spotlight.

The UNSW Institute for Climate Risk & Response is holding an Industry Forum that exemplifies this shared approach and highlights the strengths of working together toward a climate-positive future.

Embracing climate action

The lead-up to the global summit will help focus the national conversation on climate action. Australians overwhelmingly support hosting COP31 and are world leaders when it comes to rooftop solar – one in three households have solar panels. Our electricity grid is also changing as coal-fired power is replaced by wind, solar and storage. But more difficult behavioural changes are ahead.

Chair of the Climate Change Authority Matt Kean, one of the speakers at the Industry Forum, is clear that climate action is about “behavioural choices governments, businesses, communities, households and individuals make about which technologies are used, when and how”.

To make deep progress cutting emissions, we will need to make different choices about what, and how much we consume, what we eat and how we move about our cities. 

Behavioural scientists at UNSW are helping us to understand Australian attitudes toward climate action. A recent global study of almost 60,000 individuals (including nearly 1000 Australians) found simple behavioural interventions – such as writing a letter to an imagined member of a future generation, describing the actions being taken to ensure the inheritance of a healthy, habitable planet - can shift beliefs and increase policy support.  

Helping business understand climate risk and opportunity

Australian businesses are increasingly focused on climate action and will be key partners if COP31 is to be a success. The federal government has passed new regulations requiring business to report on the risks, and opportunities, that climate change poses for their operations and assets. 

Researchers at UNSW are helping businesses understand what climate models can and cannot tell us about the risks they face in a warming world. A key focus for the Industry Forum is discussion of ‘storyline’ techniques for risk assessment that combine climate model projections with other types of evidence to help businesses make well-informed decisions.

Supporting a successful UN climate summit

Universities are working together to support Australian and Pacific governments to host the UN climate talks. A COP31 Universities Alliance has been established as a partnership between Australian and Pacific universities to coordinate the contribution of the higher education and research sector toward COP31.

The UNSW Institute for Climate Risk & Response recently published a briefing note, Working Together: Australian and Pacific universities helping to deliver a successful and ambitious COP31 climate summit, which explains how Australian and Pacific universities can help deliver a successful UN climate summit.

Hosting COP31 is a unique opportunity for our region to build genuine, long-lasting climate action. A shared pathway is crucial. Universities will play a key convening role, bringing government, industry and the public together to shape an inclusive and ambitious agenda. Today’s Industry Forum is a small but important step along the path to a positive climate future. 

Ben Newell is Professor of Behavioural Science in the School of Psychology at UNSW Sydney, and Director of the UNSW Institute for Climate Risk & Response

For interviews, please contact UNSW Media & Communications Officer v.ticha@unsw.edu.au.

Media

More from this category

  • Environment, Science
  • 14/03/2025
  • 09:16
Divers for Climate

MEDIA ALERT: Australia’s First ‘Snorkel-Out for Climate’ Calls for Ocean Action Ahead of Federal Election (Sydney, Sunday 16 March 2025)

In a dramatic show of community-led ocean action, more than 100 divers and snorkelers will take to the water on Sydney's Northern Beaches forAustralia’s first-ever Snorkel-Out for Climate, calling for urgent climate action to protect our marine ecosystems. This striking in-water demonstration comes at a critical moment. For each month between October 2024 and February 2025, sea surface temperatures around Australia have been the warmest on record, with widespread coral bleaching currently unfolding on Ningaloo Reef, and parts of the northern Great Barrier Reef on high alert. At the same time, climate-driven disasters like Cyclone Alfred have triggered underwater chaos,…

  • Education Training, Government Federal
  • 14/03/2025
  • 09:12
National Tertiary Education Union

Trump interference in Australian research must be rejected: union

The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) has urged the federal government to reject the Trump administration’s attempt to interfere in Australian research. Researchers working on projects jointly funded by US federal agencies have been sent a 36-point questionnaire asking about compliance with Donald Trump’s radical right-wing agenda. Questions include whether researchers’ university has ever received funding from China and if the project complies with the administration’s transphobic “two sexes” executive order, the Australian Financial Review reports. The questionnaire also asks about secure borders with Mexico; diversity, equity and inclusion; ending government waste; terrorism; the war on opioids; and eradicating anti-Christian…

  • Community, Environment
  • 14/03/2025
  • 09:10
City of Sydney

Microclimate report finds a divide in how Sydney feels the heat

The most detailed analysis of urban heat ever carried out in our area has found suburbs near the harbour are up to 15 degrees…

  • Contains:

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.