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2.3 million days of lost learning due to ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred: Parents call for action on school safety

Parents for Climate 3 mins read

Case studies available

Ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred, made more intense and damaging due to climate pollution, has caused 2.3 million days of lost learning across Queensland and New South Wales, says advocacy group Parents for Climate.

“Unnatural weather extremes, worsened by burning coal and gas, are shutting down schools at an alarming rate. It’s time for urgent action to make schools fit for the future,” said Parents for Climate CEO Nic Seton.

''We’ve been tracking weather related-closures of schools and early cleaning centres since the start of 2024, and the numbers are staggering. The data we’ve collected shows 1,804 schools across QLD and NSW have closed for at least a day, with most closed for much longer.

“At least 650,000 students have been affected and at least 2.3 million days of learning lost due to cyclone-related closures in March.”

Days closed

Number of schools closed

Percent of total

1

4

0.25%

2

34

2.13%

3

494

30.88%

4

1068

66.75%

As more frequent extreme weather forces hundreds of schools to close, Parents for Climate is calling on state and federal governments to protect students by installing solar-powered air-conditioning and considering a shift in school term dates to avoid summer extremes.

Mr Seton said our kids’ safety and education is under threat.

“Schools in a country like Australia should have enough solar and battery power to stay open when the grid is disrupted by extreme weather events.

“After an unnatural weather event, it’s in everyone’s interests for schools to reopen as soon as possible and adapting to power disruptions and heat extremes will help. All schools should have enough solar to run even if the grid is down, so secure power can also run air conditioning when it’s dangerously hot.

“Last year the Philippines decided to move their school term because of extreme heat impacts. If governments aren’t prepared to build schools for today and tomorrow, then we’re calling for an inquiry into how schools will adapt to guarantee kids’ safety and education.”

Parents for Climate is urging governments to:

  1. Install solar-powered air conditioning and battery storage in all state schools and early childhood centres, prioritising lower-income communities.

  2. Investigate shifting school term dates to avoid increasingly severe summer weather impacts.

A recent Zurich-Mandala Climate Risk Index report warned that two-thirds of schools in Australia currently face high climate risk. This is set to rise to 84% by 2060, with students projected to endure 34 heatwave days per year.

“This is a crisis. If we continue to burn fossil fuels and governments don’t act now, more children will suffer, more schools will close, and our education system will be increasingly disrupted,” said Mr Seton

Case studies available: 

Kate Smolders, Brisbane

“I just keep thinking about how I was in my 30s before I experienced my first natural disaster.

 

“But this is the second time my six year old has experienced something like this, and for my 12 year old it’s the third.

 

“We flooded in 2011 and 2022, and we sold our last house as a result. In this house I don’t consciously worry about flooding, but when you hear that rain there’s still something in you that goes, “Oh here we go again.”

 

“It’s like hypervigilance, Everyone’s a bit on edge.”

Amy Shemwell, mother of one, Brisbane (UK-born - no previous experience with weather events like this)

-ends-


About us:

Parents for Climate is Australia’s leading climate advocacy organisation for parents, carers, families and all who care about a safe future for kids, representing over 22,000 parents. Parents for Climate . Founded in 2019 by six regional, rural and urban mums in four states and territories, Parents for Climate is a parent organisation, run by parents for parents. Parents for Climate exists to secure ambitious climate action for the love of our kids.

Background: Parents for Climate’s Solar Our Learning campaign

Parents for Climate has campaigned since 2020 for governments to support clean energy retrofits for schools and early childhood centres, and has been at the forefront of securing renewable energy in schools, such as the NSW Smart Energy School Pilot Project. Their 2024 Solar Our Learning report highlighted the need and benefits of extending these programs to the early childhood sector, which is currently unsupported to access clean energy.

References 


Contact details:

Nic Seton, Parents for Climate CEO, 0418 326 814 / nic@parentsforclimate.org

Spokesperson available from Zurich-Mandala on request

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