ABOUT WORLD BLOG

NBC News World Blog aims to provide a dynamic look at world events and trends -- both big and small -- from NBC News correspondents, producers, and bureaus around the world. Online entries -- from text to video -- will explore news events and how they are shaping our world.

Regular contributors include NBC News correspondents, producers and staff based in bureaus across the world and on assignment.

Click here to read more about the journalists behind NBC News World Blog.



Aussies ‘looking down the barrel of climate change’

Posted: Tuesday, September 04, 2007 2:15 PM
Filed Under:

Everybody here seems to be talking about climate change, but when it comes to action, there are two very different responses to be seen in Australia this week. The first will be the discussions at APEC, taking place in Sydney amid intense security. The second couldn't be more different – the practical, dogged and groundbreaking work of conservationists in the country's bush.

Take APEC first. Asia Pacific leaders have started to arrive here in fortress Sydney.

The first to arrive was China’s President Hu Jintao, who entered via Perth, the capital of Western Australia, and had coal on his mind. China’s the most important customer for that state’s big mining companies, buying up natural resources as fast as they can be dug from the ground.

President Bush came next amid the biggest security operation this country has ever seen. His harborside hotel will give him a stunning view of the Opera House – and a three-mile long, nine foot tall security fence, which the local media has dubbed the "Great Wall of Sydney," to keep protesters at bay.

For weeks, the Australian authorities have been calling this meeting of Asia-Pacific leaders the "climate change summit," hoping it might produce a concrete commitment on limiting greenhouse gases. That was always a long shot, especially now that Bush is hosting his own summit on the issue in Washington later this month and he probably won’t want to be upstaged in Sydney.

Ian Williams / NBC News
Australians hope to restore the Scottsdale reserve to its original state and create a wildlife corridor up Eastern Australia.

Hu’s side trip to Perth underscored his priorities – continuing to fuel China’s booming (and hugely polluting) economy. Fast-growing India is also reluctant to sign up to anything that will restrict its growth.

And so Australian Prime Minister John Howard, a late convert to the cause of climate change action, is now trying to downplay his hopes for the meeting, talking more generally about "progress" on the issue.

Many Australians are skeptical about Howard’s climate concerns. But, with an election due later this year, it’s a testament to what an important political issue it has become; respondents in one recent poll named climate change as the single most important external threat facing the country.

That is a reflection of a new reality here, "an extraordinary sea change in public opinion," according to Brendan Mackey, Professor of Environmental Science at the Australian National University in Canberra.

"Our droughts, our floods, our fires have really made people understand just how vulnerable we are to extreme weather events."

We’d visited Professor Mackey in the capital, Canberra, on our way into the bush to witness part of a hugely ambitious conservation project, which has gained wide support – thanks to that new reality.

A sort of climate change corridor
"We know that species are at risk. If we are looking down the barrel of climate change, it’s time to start preparing for that," Owen Whitaker told me, as he bumped along in his pick-up truck on the rough tracks of the Scottsdale reserve.

VIDEO: Going green down under

The reserve has been bought by Bush Heritage, a conservation group, using private and public donations. Whitaker is managing the former sheep farm, working to restore its 3,500 acres to its original form – planting native grass and restoring water sources.

Scottsdale is home to dozens of endangered species, as well kangaroos, wallabies, wombats and the majestic wedge-tailed eagle, which although still plentiful, are seeing their habitats eroded.

Scottsdale will be part of a network of habitats, a sort of climate change corridor, which will eventually stretch 1,500 miles down the length of eastern Australia, from the Alps in the south to the Atherton Tablelands in the north. The idea is to allow species to move with changes in the climate, to more easily migrate if any one habitat is threatened.

Bush Heritage believes it could save hundreds of species of plant and wildlife from extinction. This part of Australia is already into its sixth year of drought.

Some of the land in the corridor is national park already, other land will be bought or landowners will be encouraged to set aside some of their land as part of the corridor.

"We have to give animals some options of they are to survive," said Whitaker, for whom the ultimate aim is to enable fauna to stay one step ahead of climate change. He also knows that even if the leaders of APEC fail to come up with anything meaningful in Sydney, opinion in Australia has moved far enough to give his own project a good chance of success.

See more of Ian Williams report from Scottsdale, Australia on NBC’s Nightly News with Brian Williams on Tuesday evening.

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

How can there be global warming ?  The great Rush Limbaugh with his high school course in general science has proclaimed it is all a hoax put out by pin head scientists.  
The inconvenient truth is that so many people are ignorant to how humans may don't realize that even if we aren't causing global warming (which I think we are), we are without a doubt, affecting our environment at a destructive rate that will eventually leave us resourceless and utterly polluted. It's not the earth that needs to adapt, it's us. We don't own the earth. Who gave it to us? We are here by either chance or creationism and to crap on what was put into our responsible hands does not speak highly of our species.
Give a hoot, don't pollute. Do your part or get the hell of this planet.
At least stop the coal mining when windmill and solar power are readily available and proven. Minnesota just passed a bill to build another coal mine (that causes asthma to kids within 100 miles amoung other things) when they have plenty of land for windmills, Palm Springs is the proven ground they work. (Minnesota has backward, Republican, (the Democrats are no better as they are in the pockets of Indian casinos in the state and block all fair legislation for non-indian casinos and the state makes 0 $ from these casino's; a deal done years ago by a misguided govenor), stick-their-head-in-the-sand politicians that live in denial and in the short term - to fill their pockets.
global warming, miniature ice age, mans fault, earths cycle. which really does hold true??? they say science is a field of trial and error and it is through trial and error the human race evolves. how some preach "conserve", and those are usually the ones driving cars with less than 9mpg's. its our 8 cylinder extension of mankind that we have an insatiable appetite with. an appetite and attitude of "i'll be first at the next red light". its the 6000 sq.ft. home we have to cool/heat just because the bank book says so. the moral of the story is america is the BIGGEST waster of resources the HEAVIEST dependant of foreign oils but we cry about 2.50 per gal. the europeans use solar/wind(renewable) like we use gasoline funny that technology is STILL in the development stage here, i guess we aren't the forefront of technology?? why americans DONT welcome change is beyond even americas understanding we would rather just hold our hand out for the QUICK BUCK...than share and prosper as one..
I can't believe that people fall for climate change alarmism.  Yes, the Earth is warming - IT IS NATURAL FOLKS.  Man at most provides 5% (probably actually less) of the greenhouse gas inputs to the system.  NATURE overwhelms man's contribution!  Even if you don't get it, will you be the first to tell Asians they have to stop growing rice, their staple crop?  That's right, stop growing rice.  Rice farming produces huge amounts of METHANE which is an even more potent GHG than carbon dioxide!
The sad truth is that regardless of those who wish to deny it, human kind is making some pretty major impacts around the globe.

1) World population is growing at a frightening pace, with ever more demand for energy to help feed these added millions of people.  Where is the planing to curtail & then reverse the worlds overpopulation problem?

2) China and India, left out of Kyoto, are increasing production of air pollutants so fast that no reductions made by the "developed nations" can hope to offset them.  How can we hope to curtail climate change if these two nations, and other third world countries don't cut emissions as well as the developed nations?

3) The oceans are over fished to the point that major species we've come to depend on to help feed a hungry world are now suffering depletion to the point of collapse.  What can replace these food sources?

4) If the US and other nations continue to increase the amount of grain commodities used for fuel instead of food how will those left to starve due to these programs be fed?  

5) It's fine and good to extort people to "plant trees, lots of trees", but where is this to be done?  Where are the incentives to encourage land owners to  set aside lands they own for the growing of trees?  

There are so many different issues that those who are pushing for a "greener" world are not addressing.  How can they hope to influence the direction of events if they offer no answers to the above questions, as well as many more I'm not listing or even thinking of?

As for myself, I planted 60 white pine and over a hundred different shrubs this year so far.  I hope to get about 120-150 oak or other mast producing trees planted yet this fall.  I intend to be planting hundreds more in the next several years.  I do this not to save the world from climate change, but to create a wildlife area to enjoy in retirement someday.  Sure I'm glad it'll also help a bit with other environmental concerns, but that is not my main motivating reason for doing this.  And even in the most advanced nations, how many are there who can afford to do this if no money is made available to pay for them to do so?  I suspect very, very few.  Do the math people!  200 trees per acre is a modest number/density indeed, yet a relatively small area like the one I hope to have will require over 1K of trees.   Governments MUST offer incentives if they wish to see the tens of millions of trees they say they wish to see planted come into being.  Suggesting people must do this for their children, or the good of the earth, is nothing more than empty political verbiage devoid of real substance.  

At minimum such tree planting areas should become property tax free beginning the year they are first planted.  Or hows about a "carbon trading system" for the small landowner who's willing to plant land he owns?  I've seen mention of "carbon trading" plans for corporations, but where is a plan for the vastly more numerous small land owners?  

I write this from the prospective of the USA, perhaps in Australia there are such programs, for the sake of those in Australia I hope so.

   
We were warned about "birthpangs" a while back by the greatest figure of all time... Jesus Christ. It is fact that He existed, (and does still) and it is a fact that He warned us about such disasters as this. There is dire times ahead for the human race and I can't help but laugh at all this dickering that I'm reading on this thread! Australia, like all the other nations on this earth will be reeling from all kinds of natural and man-made disasters in times to come. We, as the human race, have made such a mess of this planet... that is the sad part. The old saying that "history teaches us that mankind learns nothing from history" is very apt for this topic of global warming or any other global whatevers. It doesn't matter if it is cyclical or not... it's happening now and it will get worse. I myself long for his return! Then, and only then will things be set to rights. I do not need a pulpit to see that!!! Pray for this planet and all of it's inhabitants to weather the times that are ahead for us all.
Agree that it's more important to find solutions to living on a warming planet, than to argue about what/who is causing it. No matter how you slice it, pollution is bad for every living thing.

To the person challenging Americans to get rid of their SUVs, etc.  I don't own an SUV, I _do_ walk to go shopping whenever possible (a number of useful places are only a mile or so away from our house), and I grow some of our food.

Turn off electricity for 12 hours a day? Well, not yet -- we still use an energy star fridge after all. But everything else is off for at least 12 hours a day. For the climate change doubters, this also saves money, so it's a good idea no matter what.


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

TRACKBACKS

Trackbacks are links to weblogs that reference this post. Like comments, trackbacks do not appear until approved by us. The trackback URL for this post is: http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/trackback.aspx?PostID=344249

Syndicate This Site

Add World Blog to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google

Interactive

Fight for Iraq
Learn more about the ethnic, religious and political power plays in and around Iraq during a briefing of the region led by NBC’s Richard Engel.