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Emission targets on track but nature in 'deep trouble'

Emission targets on track but nature in 'deep trouble'

Perth Now4 days ago

More scorching days over 35C are on the horizon, hundreds of species are considered threatened and a landfill crisis is looming with rubbish piling up rapidly, a "truly alarming" report shows.
The State of the Environment 2024, released every three years by the NSW Environment Protection Authority, found each person in the most populous state generated an average of 2.7 tonnes of waste in 2022-23.
That's the equivalent of about three small cars being thrown out.
Authority chief executive Tony Chappel praised the marked jump in renewable energy powering 34 per cent of NSW's electricity, compared to less than 20 per cent five years ago.
Bet he warned about "serious" environmental concerns particularly biodiversity loss and waste management.
There were now 1018 threatened species, an increase of 36 since 2020, the report found.
More hot days over 35C are expected as well as severe fire weather and extreme rainfall adding to the slew of catastrophic flood events that have pummelled NSW in recent years.
Plastic litter has dropped by 55 per cent, smashing the 2025 target of a 30 per cent reduction, but greater Sydney's landfill capacity is projected to run out by 2030.
Waste generation has outpaced population growth, rising from 18.7 million tonnes in 2015-16 to 22.4 million tonnes in 2022-23.
Environment Minister Penny Sharpe said the 676-page report tabled in parliament on Thursday was not all doom and gloom despite the sizeable climate challenges facing the state.
The latest figures show NSW is on track to cut emissions by 46 per cent in 2030 and 62 per cent in 2035.
Legislated climate targets for NSW are to reach 50 per reduction by 2030, 70 per cent by 2035, and net zero by 2050.
"Our first priority is to reduce emissions by 50 per cent by 2030," she said.
"We are very close - only four per cent off with five years to go. But we aren't naive. Meeting our targets will be hard."
The Climate Council said the state government was making strong progress to cut climate pollution but NSW couldn't afford any more extensions being granted to polluting coal and gas projects.
However, other environmental groups such as the Nature Conservation Council of NSW said the report made for a "truly alarming" read.
"Nature in NSW is in deep trouble and those in power are failing to turn this alarming trajectory around," council chief executive Jacqui Mumford said.
"Our state's environment is being mismanaged and until the developers, irrigators and logging companies are kicked out of government back-rooms, nothing will change."

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Emission targets on track but nature in 'deep trouble'
Emission targets on track but nature in 'deep trouble'

The Advertiser

time3 days ago

  • The Advertiser

Emission targets on track but nature in 'deep trouble'

More scorching days over 35C are on the horizon, hundreds of species are considered threatened and a landfill crisis is looming with rubbish piling up rapidly, a "truly alarming" report shows. The State of the Environment 2024, released every three years by the NSW Environment Protection Authority, found each person in the most populous state generated an average of 2.7 tonnes of waste in 2022-23. That's the equivalent of about three small cars being thrown out. Authority chief executive Tony Chappel praised the marked jump in renewable energy powering 34 per cent of NSW's electricity, compared to less than 20 per cent five years ago. Bet he warned about "serious" environmental concerns particularly biodiversity loss and waste management. There were now 1018 threatened species, an increase of 36 since 2020, the report found. More hot days over 35C are expected as well as severe fire weather and extreme rainfall adding to the slew of catastrophic flood events that have pummelled NSW in recent years. Plastic litter has dropped by 55 per cent, smashing the 2025 target of a 30 per cent reduction, but greater Sydney's landfill capacity is projected to run out by 2030. Waste generation has outpaced population growth, rising from 18.7 million tonnes in 2015-16 to 22.4 million tonnes in 2022-23. Environment Minister Penny Sharpe said the 676-page report tabled in parliament on Thursday was not all doom and gloom despite the sizeable climate challenges facing the state. The latest figures show NSW is on track to cut emissions by 46 per cent in 2030 and 62 per cent in 2035. Legislated climate targets for NSW are to reach 50 per reduction by 2030, 70 per cent by 2035, and net zero by 2050. "Our first priority is to reduce emissions by 50 per cent by 2030," she said. "We are very close - only four per cent off with five years to go. But we aren't naive. Meeting our targets will be hard." The Climate Council said the state government was making strong progress to cut climate pollution but NSW couldn't afford any more extensions being granted to polluting coal and gas projects. However, other environmental groups such as the Nature Conservation Council of NSW said the report made for a "truly alarming" read. "Nature in NSW is in deep trouble and those in power are failing to turn this alarming trajectory around," council chief executive Jacqui Mumford said. "Our state's environment is being mismanaged and until the developers, irrigators and logging companies are kicked out of government back-rooms, nothing will change." More scorching days over 35C are on the horizon, hundreds of species are considered threatened and a landfill crisis is looming with rubbish piling up rapidly, a "truly alarming" report shows. The State of the Environment 2024, released every three years by the NSW Environment Protection Authority, found each person in the most populous state generated an average of 2.7 tonnes of waste in 2022-23. That's the equivalent of about three small cars being thrown out. Authority chief executive Tony Chappel praised the marked jump in renewable energy powering 34 per cent of NSW's electricity, compared to less than 20 per cent five years ago. Bet he warned about "serious" environmental concerns particularly biodiversity loss and waste management. There were now 1018 threatened species, an increase of 36 since 2020, the report found. More hot days over 35C are expected as well as severe fire weather and extreme rainfall adding to the slew of catastrophic flood events that have pummelled NSW in recent years. Plastic litter has dropped by 55 per cent, smashing the 2025 target of a 30 per cent reduction, but greater Sydney's landfill capacity is projected to run out by 2030. Waste generation has outpaced population growth, rising from 18.7 million tonnes in 2015-16 to 22.4 million tonnes in 2022-23. Environment Minister Penny Sharpe said the 676-page report tabled in parliament on Thursday was not all doom and gloom despite the sizeable climate challenges facing the state. The latest figures show NSW is on track to cut emissions by 46 per cent in 2030 and 62 per cent in 2035. Legislated climate targets for NSW are to reach 50 per reduction by 2030, 70 per cent by 2035, and net zero by 2050. "Our first priority is to reduce emissions by 50 per cent by 2030," she said. "We are very close - only four per cent off with five years to go. But we aren't naive. Meeting our targets will be hard." The Climate Council said the state government was making strong progress to cut climate pollution but NSW couldn't afford any more extensions being granted to polluting coal and gas projects. However, other environmental groups such as the Nature Conservation Council of NSW said the report made for a "truly alarming" read. "Nature in NSW is in deep trouble and those in power are failing to turn this alarming trajectory around," council chief executive Jacqui Mumford said. "Our state's environment is being mismanaged and until the developers, irrigators and logging companies are kicked out of government back-rooms, nothing will change." More scorching days over 35C are on the horizon, hundreds of species are considered threatened and a landfill crisis is looming with rubbish piling up rapidly, a "truly alarming" report shows. The State of the Environment 2024, released every three years by the NSW Environment Protection Authority, found each person in the most populous state generated an average of 2.7 tonnes of waste in 2022-23. That's the equivalent of about three small cars being thrown out. Authority chief executive Tony Chappel praised the marked jump in renewable energy powering 34 per cent of NSW's electricity, compared to less than 20 per cent five years ago. Bet he warned about "serious" environmental concerns particularly biodiversity loss and waste management. There were now 1018 threatened species, an increase of 36 since 2020, the report found. More hot days over 35C are expected as well as severe fire weather and extreme rainfall adding to the slew of catastrophic flood events that have pummelled NSW in recent years. Plastic litter has dropped by 55 per cent, smashing the 2025 target of a 30 per cent reduction, but greater Sydney's landfill capacity is projected to run out by 2030. Waste generation has outpaced population growth, rising from 18.7 million tonnes in 2015-16 to 22.4 million tonnes in 2022-23. Environment Minister Penny Sharpe said the 676-page report tabled in parliament on Thursday was not all doom and gloom despite the sizeable climate challenges facing the state. The latest figures show NSW is on track to cut emissions by 46 per cent in 2030 and 62 per cent in 2035. Legislated climate targets for NSW are to reach 50 per reduction by 2030, 70 per cent by 2035, and net zero by 2050. "Our first priority is to reduce emissions by 50 per cent by 2030," she said. "We are very close - only four per cent off with five years to go. But we aren't naive. Meeting our targets will be hard." The Climate Council said the state government was making strong progress to cut climate pollution but NSW couldn't afford any more extensions being granted to polluting coal and gas projects. However, other environmental groups such as the Nature Conservation Council of NSW said the report made for a "truly alarming" read. "Nature in NSW is in deep trouble and those in power are failing to turn this alarming trajectory around," council chief executive Jacqui Mumford said. "Our state's environment is being mismanaged and until the developers, irrigators and logging companies are kicked out of government back-rooms, nothing will change." More scorching days over 35C are on the horizon, hundreds of species are considered threatened and a landfill crisis is looming with rubbish piling up rapidly, a "truly alarming" report shows. The State of the Environment 2024, released every three years by the NSW Environment Protection Authority, found each person in the most populous state generated an average of 2.7 tonnes of waste in 2022-23. That's the equivalent of about three small cars being thrown out. Authority chief executive Tony Chappel praised the marked jump in renewable energy powering 34 per cent of NSW's electricity, compared to less than 20 per cent five years ago. Bet he warned about "serious" environmental concerns particularly biodiversity loss and waste management. There were now 1018 threatened species, an increase of 36 since 2020, the report found. More hot days over 35C are expected as well as severe fire weather and extreme rainfall adding to the slew of catastrophic flood events that have pummelled NSW in recent years. Plastic litter has dropped by 55 per cent, smashing the 2025 target of a 30 per cent reduction, but greater Sydney's landfill capacity is projected to run out by 2030. Waste generation has outpaced population growth, rising from 18.7 million tonnes in 2015-16 to 22.4 million tonnes in 2022-23. Environment Minister Penny Sharpe said the 676-page report tabled in parliament on Thursday was not all doom and gloom despite the sizeable climate challenges facing the state. The latest figures show NSW is on track to cut emissions by 46 per cent in 2030 and 62 per cent in 2035. Legislated climate targets for NSW are to reach 50 per reduction by 2030, 70 per cent by 2035, and net zero by 2050. "Our first priority is to reduce emissions by 50 per cent by 2030," she said. "We are very close - only four per cent off with five years to go. But we aren't naive. Meeting our targets will be hard." The Climate Council said the state government was making strong progress to cut climate pollution but NSW couldn't afford any more extensions being granted to polluting coal and gas projects. However, other environmental groups such as the Nature Conservation Council of NSW said the report made for a "truly alarming" read. "Nature in NSW is in deep trouble and those in power are failing to turn this alarming trajectory around," council chief executive Jacqui Mumford said. "Our state's environment is being mismanaged and until the developers, irrigators and logging companies are kicked out of government back-rooms, nothing will change."

Emission targets on track but nature in 'deep trouble'
Emission targets on track but nature in 'deep trouble'

Perth Now

time4 days ago

  • Perth Now

Emission targets on track but nature in 'deep trouble'

More scorching days over 35C are on the horizon, hundreds of species are considered threatened and a landfill crisis is looming with rubbish piling up rapidly, a "truly alarming" report shows. The State of the Environment 2024, released every three years by the NSW Environment Protection Authority, found each person in the most populous state generated an average of 2.7 tonnes of waste in 2022-23. That's the equivalent of about three small cars being thrown out. Authority chief executive Tony Chappel praised the marked jump in renewable energy powering 34 per cent of NSW's electricity, compared to less than 20 per cent five years ago. Bet he warned about "serious" environmental concerns particularly biodiversity loss and waste management. There were now 1018 threatened species, an increase of 36 since 2020, the report found. More hot days over 35C are expected as well as severe fire weather and extreme rainfall adding to the slew of catastrophic flood events that have pummelled NSW in recent years. Plastic litter has dropped by 55 per cent, smashing the 2025 target of a 30 per cent reduction, but greater Sydney's landfill capacity is projected to run out by 2030. Waste generation has outpaced population growth, rising from 18.7 million tonnes in 2015-16 to 22.4 million tonnes in 2022-23. Environment Minister Penny Sharpe said the 676-page report tabled in parliament on Thursday was not all doom and gloom despite the sizeable climate challenges facing the state. The latest figures show NSW is on track to cut emissions by 46 per cent in 2030 and 62 per cent in 2035. Legislated climate targets for NSW are to reach 50 per reduction by 2030, 70 per cent by 2035, and net zero by 2050. "Our first priority is to reduce emissions by 50 per cent by 2030," she said. "We are very close - only four per cent off with five years to go. But we aren't naive. Meeting our targets will be hard." The Climate Council said the state government was making strong progress to cut climate pollution but NSW couldn't afford any more extensions being granted to polluting coal and gas projects. However, other environmental groups such as the Nature Conservation Council of NSW said the report made for a "truly alarming" read. "Nature in NSW is in deep trouble and those in power are failing to turn this alarming trajectory around," council chief executive Jacqui Mumford said. "Our state's environment is being mismanaged and until the developers, irrigators and logging companies are kicked out of government back-rooms, nothing will change."

Farmers face 'new world' of extreme weather as scientists urge action on climate change
Farmers face 'new world' of extreme weather as scientists urge action on climate change

ABC News

time05-06-2025

  • ABC News

Farmers face 'new world' of extreme weather as scientists urge action on climate change

Scientists and politicians are warning big policy shifts are needed to mitigate extreme weather impacts, following what farmers describe as unprecedented flooding in the New South Wales Hunter and Mid North Coast regions last month. Climate scientist and University of Melbourne Emeritus Professor David Karoly said a near-stationary high pressure system in the Tasman Sea had contributed to the high rainfall event, stalling a moist, easterly flow of air over the NSW coast. Dr Karoly, who is a member of the Climate Council, said governments needed to take action on climate change to limit these types of extreme events. He said a range of approaches were needed, including changes to farming practices. "Farmers have to think about how they can reduce erosion associated with some of these increased rainfall extremes, but also need to think about how they can manage their farm dams because we're also seeing increases in the frequency of drought," he said. Craig Emerton, whose family has been farming at Croki since 1856, described the May floods as "totally unprecedented", with water levels three times higher than he had experienced before. However, the dairy farmer said he was not convinced climate change was the issue. He pointed to geography for evidence of what happened before Australia was colonised and flood height records were started. "When we look at the landform on this coastal flood plain, we can see that there's been big floods over the years where sediment has built up," he said. "My dad spoke of six floods in six weeks … so we just happen to be in a very wet period." At Dungong, fellow dairy farmer Sue McGinn shared his view. "I believe the Australian climate has always been a land of droughts and floods," she said. In March, ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred crossed Ms McGinn's property, then what she described as a "rain bomb" dumped another 200 millimetres in just a few hours in the middle of the night on May 3. She said it was the farm's most difficult season in 31 years, and she and her husband were exhausted by the repeated setbacks. While both farmers are right that Australia has always had extreme weather events like this, what is changing is the frequency and intensity of those events. The Climate Council said the recent flooding disasters are linked to human-led climate change caused by emissions from fossil fuels. Chief executive Amanda McKenzie said a number of events combined to make the May floods more severe. They included an increase in the amount of water vapour in the atmosphere, which reached a record high in 2024 at about 5 per cent above the 1991–2020 average, according to Climate Council data. The Bureau of Meteorology said in its Special Climate Statement 77 in September 2023 that every 1 degree Celsius of warming could increase moisture in the atmosphere by 7 per cent, which could provide more energy for some processes that generated extreme rainfall events. Ms McKenzie said Australia was experiencing 7 to 28 per cent more rain for shorter duration rainfall events and 2 to 15 per cent more rain for longer duration events. Scientists can analyse whether single extreme events are linked to climate change. Extreme weather research organisation ClimaMeter, funded by the European Union and the French National Centre for Scientific Research, has published a paper looking at the link between climate change and the May NSW floods. It studied changes in weather patterns since 1950 and concluded that the extreme precipitation that caused the flooding was intensified by human-induced climate change, with natural variability playing a secondary role. NSW Greens MP Sue Higginson is also a farmer in the Northern Rivers region. Her property on the Richmond River near Lismore was impacted by the 2022 flood, and she puts the blame for such events squarely on climate change. Ms Higginson said some farming practices were no longer viable and communities would need to adjust. "In the north, we're looking at some of our very low-lying cane fields, we know they're no longer viable in the coming years," she said. In some cases, Ms Higginson said farmers would have to move. "When we get to the hard edges where we can't adapt to a changing climate, then yes, we have to retreat and relocate," she said. She said governments must stop approving new fossil fuel projects. "When I see the premier and the ministers out there on the frontline of the disaster zones … but then in the same breath on the same day we see the NSW government approving brand new coal expansions in the Hunter Valley … that sort of hypocrisy or not joining the dots I think is doing no-one any favours," Ms Higginson said. Dr Karoly said while the link between climate change and extreme weather was well-known, Australia did not have a national climate adaptation plan. "There was one due out before the last election, but it's been delayed," he said. He said he wanted the government to stop approving fossil fuel developments and to increase taxes on the mining industry to fund projects that helped communities address repeat disasters. Dr Karoly said Taree may need to consider levee banks, relocating houses, and drainage systems that could remove floodwater quickly. "What we need are local plans for doing that effectively and rapidly," he said.

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