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FIRE STORM
U.N. official: Australian bushfires a climate change warning
by Staff Writers
Canberra, Australia (UPI) Oct 22, 2013


Australian PM denies climate change link to bushfires
Sydney (AFP) Oct 23, 2013 - Prime Minister Tony Abbott denied Wednesday that devastating bushfires in Australia were linked to climate change, saying the United Nations climate chief was "talking through her hat" on the issue.

UN climate chief Christiana Figueres said Tuesday that while the latest fires raging west of Sydney could not yet be linked to global warming, there was "absolutely" a connection between wildfires and rising temperatures.

"The official in question is talking through her hat," Abbott told radio station 3AW.

"Climate change is real, as I've often said, and we should take strong action against it.

"But these fires are certainly not a function of climate change -- they're just a function of life in Australia," he said.

The vast country's hot and dry weather makes it particularly prone to bushfires and they are a regular feature of summer.

But the current blazes, which have razed more than 200 homes, have inflamed debate about whether there is a link to climate change and Figueres, executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), weighed in during an interview with CNN.

"The World Meteorological Organization has not established a direct link between this wildfire and climate change - yet," Figueres said.

"But what is absolutely clear is the science is telling us that there are increasing heatwaves in Asia, Europe, and Australia, that there these will continue, that they will continue in their intensity and in their frequency."

Abbott rejected the connection saying "fire is a part of the Australian experience".

Figueres also criticised Abbott's decision to repeal a carbon tax on emissions put in place by the previous government to combat climate change.

Abbott, who once described climate change science as "absolute crap", campaigned hard against the so-called carbon tax for the September election and has made repealing it the first priority of his conservative government.

As firefighters tackled dire weather conditions on Wednesday, Abbott defended his decision to help locals with firefighting operations last weekend.

"I think the risks are well within the bounds of what is acceptable," said the prime minister, who has been a volunteer firefighter for a decade.

"Even as a prime minister you've got to be a human being first."

The U.N. climate chief is calling for action to avoid disasters such as the bushfires in New South Wales, Australia.

"The science is telling us that there are increasing heatwaves in Asia, Europe and Australia -- that these will continue, that they will continue in their intensity and in their frequency -- an example of what we may be looking at unless we take actually vigorous action," Christiana Figueres, executive secretary of the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change told CNN Monday.

As of Tuesday, a line of wildfires nearly 1,000 miles long raged through Australia's most populous state. Already an area about the size of Los Angeles has been burned.

And last month was considered Australia's warmest September on record.

Australia is the world's highest-per-capita carbon emitter among developed nations.

Elected last month, Prime Minister Tony Abbott's Coalition government aims to scrap the carbon tax -- which went into effect in July 2012 under then-Prime Minister Julia Gillard Labor government -- and take what it considers direct action.

Under the carbon tax system, the country's top 500 polluters are charged $22 for each ton of carbon emitted into the atmosphere and it would have increased to about $23.40 next year.

The coalition's "direct action" plan includes establishing a $3 billion emissions reduction fund, paying for domestic green projects and exploring new carbon technologies.

Asked about the Australian government's proposed plan, the U.N. climate chief told CNN: "What the new government in Australia has not done is step away from its international commitment on climate change. What they are struggling with is not what they are going to do but how are they going to get there."

But Figueres says Australia's direct action plan could be a lot more expensive than pricing carbon.

"They are going to have to pay a very high political price and a very high financial price because the route they are choosing to take to get to the same target agreed by the last government could be a lot more expensive for them, and for the population," she said.

Yet the U.N. official urged putting a price on carbon.

"We are already paying the price of carbon," Figueres told CNN. "We are paying the price with wildfires, we are paying the price with droughts, we are paying the price with all sorts disturbances to the hydrological cycle.

"What we need to do is put a price on carbon so we don't pay the price of carbon," she said.

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