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HomeNewsOpinionWhat Australia’s wildfires can — and can’t — teach a smoky US

What Australia’s wildfires can — and can’t — teach a smoky US

A 2019 analysis of 73 separate studies on public opinion and climate experiences found that extreme weather only had a weak effect on people’s views, far less than traditional factors such as underlying partisanship. However, elections after the Australian wildfires delivered the country's greenest Parliament 

June 09, 2023 / 10:48 IST
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The effects of disasters can also be limited and perverse. Although support for new coal mines in Australia fell from 45.3% to 37% after the bushfires. (Source: Bloomberg)

If you were looking for a silver lining in the cloud of smoke that’s descended on New York this week as wildfires raged through Canada’s forests, consider the effect a similar natural disaster in 2019 and 2020 had on the politics of climate on the opposite side of the world.

Australia has long had a reputation as a climate laggard. A country that vies with Indonesia and Qatar as the biggest exporter of coal and liquefied natural gas, its leaders have spent decades blocking environmental action. Former Prime Minister John Howard refused to ratify the 1997 Kyoto Protocol. His successor Tony Abbott once dismissed the science of climate change as “absolute crap.” Scott Morrison, the incumbent at the time of the 2019 fires, brandished a lump of coal on the floor of parliament to taunt the Labor opposition.

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Just a few months before the start of the fire season, the country’s May 2019 general election was seen as having dealt a decisive blow against green policies. “A perception that Labor was not supportive of the mining industry,” due to its equivocal stance on Indian billionaire Gautam Adani’s Carmichael coal project, cost the party votes in regions dependent on digging up solid fuel, according to the party’s post-mortem into the election. It was released in November just as the fires were hitting disastrous proportions. Fearful of being seen to highlight climate-adjacent issues, Labor and the broader political-media class initially remained largely silent on the fires, even as red smoke and floating ash cloaked Sydney.

The unmistakable devastation of the subsequent fire season, with its infernal images of flame-ringed holiday towns and toxic legacy of health problems, changed all that. Polling done by the Australian National University in early 2020 found that confidence in the federal government fell by 10.9 percentage points over the bushfire period, while the number seeing the environment as a crucial issue rose 8.2 percentage points. Some 77.8 percent of the population had a friend or family who was directly exposed to the catastrophe.