logo
#

Latest news with #ExTropicalCycloneAlfred

Beach erosion grounds Pacific Airshow months after ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred
Beach erosion grounds Pacific Airshow months after ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred

ABC News

time30-05-2025

  • Climate
  • ABC News

Beach erosion grounds Pacific Airshow months after ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred

A popular airshow on the Gold Coast has been cancelled, with organisers blaming beach erosion caused by Ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred. The Pacific Airshow, which last year attracted 270,000 spectators, was meant to take place over three days from August 15 on Surfers Paradise beach. The famous stretch of sand remains closed after large swells pounded the beach during ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred in early March. The Gold Coast City Council had hoped to restore the beaches by Easter, with a sand-dredging barge brought in to replenish more than 4 million cubic metres of sand, but large swells and king tides have delayed the project. Until earlier this month, Pacific Airshow organisers were reassuring the public they were confident the city's eroded beaches would be ready in time for this year's event. However in a statement on Friday the event's director said extensive modelling revealed the site wouldn't be safe for spectators. "Our team is devastated to be forced to cancel Pacific Airshow Gold Coast 2025, but it's the right thing to do for everyone and the long-term restoration of the beach," said airshow director Kevin Elliott. He said organisers considered changing the date and moving to another location on the Gold Coast but could not find an option that wouldn't compromise the show or community safety. Mr Elliott said tickets holders would be given the choice of either receiving a refund or holding the tickets to use for the 2026 event. The Queensland government had estimated the event generates more than $33 million in overnight visitor expenditure for the Gold Coast, with more than 22,000 people flying to Queensland specifically for the event.

Climate targets are only as good as the action behind them. We need to aim higher
Climate targets are only as good as the action behind them. We need to aim higher

The Guardian

time19-05-2025

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

Climate targets are only as good as the action behind them. We need to aim higher

At its core, the most fundamental duty of any government is to safeguard the security and wellbeing of its people. The climate crisis is hitting Australians hard. Right now, farmers in South Australia and Victoria are battling drought, while Queensland farmers pick up the pieces after heart-breaking floods. Globally, 2024 was the hottest year on record and the first time average temperatures surged 1.5C above preindustrial levels. We are living through longer, deadlier heatwaves, devastating bushfires, more frequent and intense floods, and rising sea levels that threaten coastal communities. This year, the economic impacts of the climate crisis have been severe as well, with Ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred adding a $1.2bn cost to the federal budget. Scientists have warned us for decades that slashing climate pollution is critical to protecting Australians. The last federal parliament started to turn around Australia's highly polluting economy. We now have about 40% of the electricity in our main grid coming from renewables backed by storage, a vehicle efficiency scheme to cut transport pollution, and we have begun regulating big polluters. Despite the fossil fuel lobby bankrolling third party groups to run campaigns against climate solutions, Australians have resoundingly endorsed Labor's energy and climate policies and given them a historic mandate to go further. One of the first tests for the new government will be setting a 2035 emissions reduction target, a line in the sand that will guide Australia's climate action for the next decade. The government has tasked the Climate Change Authority (CCA), headed up by former NSW Treasurer Matt Kean, to come up with a number that reflects both what is necessary and what is possible. The world's best scientists have told us that to protect Australians we must drive down climate pollution by at least 75% by 2030 and reach net zero by 2035. Most Australian state and territory governments have set commitments to cut climate pollution. ClimateWorks has found that together these targets would slash Australia's pollution by an estimated 66 to 71%. While it is well below what is necessary, the federal government can build on this sub-national action to drive pollution down further and faster. A 71% target should be considered a floor upon which a larger federal target should be built. Climate science can also show us the real world implications of doing too little. Our analysis shows that a 2035 target of 70% (essentially the current commitments of Australia's states and territory governments) would align with global warming of well over 2C this century, if other countries made similar commitments. This would be catastrophic: communities exposed to flood and fire risk will certainly be forced to move, our coral reefs will be all but destroyed, and the costs to our economy and way of life would be severe. In response to Donald Trump's shrill call to 'drill, baby drill', the rest of the world has an opportunity to step into the vacuum created by the absence of American leadership. Australia is the world's 14th largest polluter and one of the biggest fossil fuel exporters. If we set a strong 2035 target alongside other climate leaders, we will bring others with us to keep driving the clean energy revolution, and strengthen our case as a host of the 2026 Conference of Parties. But, if significant countries like Australia step backwards it is highly likely that we will leave the climate challenge far too late. We resign ourselves to catastrophic levels of global heating. Understanding what is possible is a tricky process of balancing assumptions about the future. In doing so, what is possible tends to be underestimated. When I started working on climate change in 2006 there were a few thousand homes in Australia with solar panels. Today there are over 4m. No one expected it to happen so fast. The cost of solar, wind and batteries have fallen more quickly than expected, with our communities and business leaders embracing the change. Of course, targets are only as good as the action behind them and we need to go faster in all areas. Australia's 2035 emissions reduction target must be a line of defence against the escalating dangers of climate change. The Australian people are expecting meaningful action on climate change, having just given a massive majority to a Labor government that promised to take the crisis seriously. The choices around how fast we cut climate pollution will define how safe or scary the world becomes as our children grow up. Doing what is necessary is hard, but failing now could very likely undermine other work of this government on setting out its legacy – and will make life extremely difficult for everyone that comes after us. Amanda McKenzie is the CEO of the Climate Council

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store