Skip to content
Emergency Services, Environment

The next Black Summer is coming: ex-fire chief launches national ad campaign

Climate Council 3 mins read

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
THURSDAY 27 MARCH, 2025

Former Fire & Rescue NSW Commissioner and Climate Councillor Greg Mullins is warning that another disaster on the scale of Black Summer is coming—and that this federal election is a critical opportunity to vote for stronger climate action to keep Australians safer.

As extreme weather events continue to intensify, and with polling consistently showing that the majority of Australians support climate action1, the Climate Council is launching a hard-hitting national advertising campaign to remind voters to put climate first at the ballot box:

"This is a critical climate election. Vote like our lives depend on it—because they do," warns Greg Mullins in the advertising campaign.

“The fires we’re fighting now are nothing like those of the past. Our climate is changing, and our communities have suffered enough,” says Mullins, who has been fighting fires for more than 50 years in a long professional career and now as a volunteer.

The advertising campaign also points out the Federal Coalition’s poor track record on climate, and highlights that their 2025 election policies will increase - not cut - climate pollution from coal, oil and gas. This will put even more Australians in harm’s way.

Mr Mullins, along with 22 other former fire and emergency chiefs, tried to warn then Coalition Prime Minister Scott Morrison about the horrific fire conditions ahead of the Black Summer bushfires, only to be ignored. This inspired the formation of the group Emergency Leaders for Climate Action.

“The greatest tragedy of the Black Summer bushfires is that we saw it coming,” Mr Mullins says. “We can’t afford leaders who ignore the warning signs. The Federal Coalition still has no credible plan to cut climate pollution.”

Climate Council CEO Amanda McKenzie said analysis by the independent Climate Change Authority had found that the Federal Coalition’s nuclear scheme would actually increase climate pollution by two billion tonnes, not cut it, and put more Australians at risk of worsening climate-fuelled disasters.

“Australians have a clear choice to make at the next federal election. History has shown us that the Federal Coalition doesn’t take the threat of climate change seriously, and their 2025 election policies are more of the same. Every action taken in the next term of Parliament counts – and every fraction of a degree of avoided warming will be measured in lives and livelihoods saved, fewer families forced to flee from their homes, and a safer future for our children.”

"Research shows that climate change is one of the issues that tops the list of voter concerns this election. Our aim is to remind Australians that elections are about the long-term future we build for our children. The decisions of the next government will be crucial so use your vote to show politicians you want action on climate change”

The Climate Council’s campaign aims to remind voters of the real-world consequences of today’s political choices, including:

  • Australia getting hotter and more dangerous. Bushfires, floods, and extreme heat are escalating, fuelled by burning fossil fuels like coal and gas.
  • More people than ever are in harm’s way. Expanding suburban fringes and coastal developments mean more Australians are now living in flood- and fire-prone areas and at greater risk, straining the capacity of emergency services.
  • The Coalition still has no credible climate plan. Analysis by experts shows their nuclear scheme will slow renewable energy investment, prolong fossil fuels, and worsen climate impacts.

The campaign will launch on 27 March with ads screening on television and online from Sunday 30 March.

1 Under Pressure: The Climate Crunch Fueling Inflation and Hurting Aussie Families


Key Facts:

Vote Like Our Lives Depend On It campaign materials available for dowload HERE


About us:

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


Contact details:

For interviews please contact the Climate Council media team on [email protected] or call 0485 863 063.

More from this category

  • Environment, Women
  • 05/03/2026
  • 12:00
Bush Heritage Australia & Trust for Nature

NEW INTERNSHIP TO SUPPORT EMERGING WOMEN AND GENDER DIVERSE CONSERVATIONISTS

Bush Heritage Australia and Trust for Nature have announced a collaborative internship designed to open new pathways for women and gender diverse early career conservationists. Women remain underrepresented across many STEM fields in Australia. In 2024 the proportion of women in STEM-qualified occupations had plateaued at 15 percent. While environmental science performs much better than the broader STEM sector in gender representation, equity has not yet been consistently achieved or sustained. The Bush Heritage and Trust for Nature Conservation Internship aims to directly address this gap by providing practical experience, professional networks and clearer entry points into conservation careers. Bush…

  • Environment
  • 05/03/2026
  • 11:36
Greenpeace Australia Pacific

Greenpeace welcomes WA Government’s starting plan for renewable energy projects to pay their way, but the real costs should be borne by oil and gas industry

SYDNEY, Thursday 5 March 2026 — The WA Government has released their Community Benefit Guidelines outlining the expectations on renewable energy companies paying their fair share to local communities hosting wind turbines and solar panels.Big gas corporations like Chevron and Woodside recently announced annual profits in the billions, while the WA Government is expected to receive only $365 million in total royalties for the 2025-'26 financial year.That amounts to only 0.7 per cent of WA’s revenue with further declines expected. Most oil and gas operations are currently not required to pay any royalties at all to WA. Geoff Bice, WA…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Travel Tourism
  • 05/03/2026
  • 11:06
Divers for Climate

Thirty weedy seadragons in a single dive: What South Australia’s divers are seeing underwater

South Australia’s harmful algal bloom has entered its second year, local divers are witnessing dramatic shifts in marine life. A national community of dive…

  • 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.