Policy & Planning

‘We have lost Australia for now,’ warns climate scientist in wake of election

Published by

The unexpected victory of conservatives in Australia’s election last Saturday is bad news for the future of global climate action, warn climate experts.

Polls had suggested that the Labor Party, which supports strong climate action, held a narrow lead in recent days. But in the end, Prime Minister Scott Morrison won re-election as his Liberal Party (which is actually conservative) swept to victory.

“Australians elected someone who once brought a lump of coal into Parliament urging us to dismiss the warnings from climate scientists, and to dig up more coal instead,” Professor Stephan Lewandowsky, an Australian cognitive scientist, told ThinkProgress in an email. “There is little doubt that his government will do precisely that.”

“We have lost Australia for now,” warned Penn State climatologist Michael Mann in an email.  “A coalition of a small number of bad actors now threaten the survivability of our species,” he said.

These include “the fossil fueled Murdoch media empire, which saturated the country with dishonest right-wing campaign propaganda” working with a few “petrostates including Saudi Arabia, Russia, Trump’s America, and now Australia.”

Rupert Murdoch’s grip on the Australian media — and his support of climate disinformation around the world — led one Australian scientist to write in 2011: “The Murdoch media empire has cost humanity perhaps one or two decades of time in the battle against climate change.”

In re-electing Morrison, a long-time opponent of climate action, Murdoch and his allies have triumphed again.

In fact, Morrison became prime minister in 2018 following a party coup against then Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who supported the climate action.

Turnbull’s efforts (to put in a mechanism) to cut carbon pollution and promote clean energy rankled right-wing members of his ruling Liberal Party, whose stances were closer to President Trump’s pro-coal (and anti-immigrant) policies.

Ironically, 2019 has already seen the hottest summer on record for Australia. The temperatures have been so brutal in South Australia, in fact, that heat-stressed bats are literally falling out of trees.

Australia is one of most vulnerable countries to climate change, since much of it is already very hot and dry — and so much of its population lives along the coast, which is threatened by rapidly rising sea levels.

Morrison’s reelection is thus a disaster for the future of the country — and the world, since avoiding catastrophic climate change requires a collective effort.

And so “we must redouble our efforts to make sure that the rest of the world works even harder to act on climate,” said Mann. “The stakes are too great to simply give up.”

Source: ThinkProgress. Reproduced with permission.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Albanese pledges another $750 in funds for green industry and metals

Albanese pledges more funds to make the mining and refining of critical metals – including…

14 March 2025

Independent running against Dutton wants bipartisan focus on home batteries after cyclone outages

With most Dickson homes using solar but few affording batteries, Independent candidate Ellie Smith has…

14 March 2025

Energy ministers push for rethink on how regulator sets electricity price benchmark

Federal and state energy ministers call on AER to "further interrogate" inputs to its final…

14 March 2025

Coalition refuses to back Australia and Pacific Island nations hosting 2026 UN climate summit

Coalition refuses to commit to backing the 2026 UN climate summit that Australia's current government…

14 March 2025

Zinc miner wins federal green tick to triple size of wind farm, slash crippling gas costs

Upsized plans to build wind farm to help power a massive zinc mine in the…

14 March 2025

New grant scheme seeks to make getting off gas easier for Victorian households

Victorian government continues push to get millions of households across the state off gas and…

14 March 2025