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The future we must plan for. Climate change forum

The global environment is changing rapidly. This can be seen very clearly in the natural environment in the form of resource depletion, environmental degradation, pollution and species loss as well as climate change and global warming. These changes are all measurable and present profound challenges for the way societies live and the values, principles and structures that support them including the economic system and functioning of institutions and government.

Governments need to plan for the future but the starting point must be a realistic understanding of the scale and dimensions of these changes, what is driving them and their likely impacts. This will be the subject of this forum.

This subject has profound implications for societies throughout the world. It will be of critical interest to policy and decision makers in business and all levels of government as well as the broader community.

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climate change government policy public forum

The future we must plan for. Online event, Friday 4 December

Online event, Friday 4 December 1.30pm to 4.30pm

The global environment is changing rapidly. This can be seen very clearly in the natural environment in the
form of resource depletion, environmental degradation, pollution and species loss as well as climate change
and global warming.

These changes are all measurable and present profound challenges for the way societies live and the values,
principles and structures that support them including the economic system and functioning of institutions and
government.

Governments need to plan for the future but the starting point must be a realistic understanding of the scale
and dimensions of these changes, what is driving them and their likely impacts. This will be the subject of this
forum.

This subject has profound implications for societies throughout the world. It will be of critical interest to
policy and decision makers in business and all levels of government as well as the broader community.

Speakers

David Karoly is Leader of the Earth Systems and Climate Change Hub in the Australian Government’s National Environmental Science Program, based in CSIRO. He is also an honorary Professor at the University of Melbourne. He is an internationally recognised expert on climate change and climate variability. Professor Karoly was a member of the National Climate Science Advisory Committee which delivered its final report “Climate Science for Australia’s Future” in 2019. During 2012-2017, he was a member of the Climate Change Authority, which provides advice to the Australian government on responding to climate change, including targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. He has been involved in the Assessment Reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in 2001, 2007, 2014 and 2021 in several different roles. He was elected as a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science in 2019 and was awarded the 2015 Royal Society of Victoria Medal for Scientific Excellence in Earth Sciences.

Will Steffen is an Earth System scientist. He is a Councillor on the publicly-funded Climate Council of Australia that delivers independent expert information about climate change, an Emeritus Professor at the Australian National University (ANU); Canberra, a Senior Fellow at the Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden; and a Fellow at the Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics, Stockholm. He is the chair of the jury for the Volvo Environment Prize; a member of the International Advisory Board for the Centre for Collective Action Research, Gothenburg University, Sweden; and a member of the Anthropocene Working Group of the Sub-committee on Quaternary Stratigraphy. From 1998 to mid-2004, Steffen was Executive Director of the International GeosphereBiosphere Program based in Stockholm. His research interests span a broad range within climate and Earth System science, with an emphasis on incorporation of human processes in Earth System modelling and analysis; and on sustainability and climate change.

Robyn Eckersley is a Professor of Political Science at the University of Melbourne. She has published widely in the fields of environmental politics, political theory and international relations, with a special focus on the ethics, politics and governance of climate change. She is a Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia (since 2007) and she received a Distinguished Scholar Award by the Environmental Studies Section of the International Studies Association in 2019.

Panel members

Adam Bandt MP

Sally Capp Lord Mayor City of Melbourne

Chair Roger Taylor, Chair Transport for Melbourne

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climate change covid-19 public forum

The Future We Must Plan For

This is the subject of Transport for Melbourne’s next forum to be held on 4th December 2020.

It is our belief that planning is a waste of time if you have no idea what future you are planning for. As the covid pandemic has demonstrated It certainly will not be business as usual, yet that is what many politicians continue to hope and plan for and is reflected in many of the major transport projects being pursued or advocated for by government – even today.

Whilst the covid pandemic will be transformative in many ways, its impact will be quickly overtaken by other global changes – principally of an environmental nature which will have a profound impact on everything we do – our way of life. It will also have implications for our values and aspirations and the choices we make now and in the future.
As Prof Johan Rockstrom (Director Potsdam Institute of Climate Impact Research, Germany) stated recently the Earth is fast approaching a tipping point ie 2 degrees above pre industrial levels which will put it into a new state – Hot House Earth in which global temperatures will rise rapidly to 7 degrees or more by the end of the century fed by positive reinforcing loops which will be impossible to reverse. A 1.5 degree increase was established years ago as the point at which the planet enters the danger zone. According to a new report by the World Meteorological Organisation this may be reached as soon as 2024, and further increases are locked in until 2040 even if we stopped all greenhouse emissions immediately.

It should be noted that global temperatures have been tightly constrained for the last three million years ie within minus four and plus two degrees which defined the glacial/interglacial states for the duration of the Pleistocene. It has been the capacity of the earth’s biosphere to self regulate that has kept global temperatures within this very narrow temperature range during this period despite variations in solar intensity, volcanism and other external factors and maintain the world we know. But Hot House Earth will be very different. It will be a very harsh and alien world and provide a pathway to mass extinction – a process that is already well advanced.

If we want to avoid runaway climate change and Hot House Earth we are running out of time. Indeed Prof Will Steffen reported more than a decade ago there is strong scientific evidence that we have already left the interglacial state – known as the Holocene and entered a new state – the Anthropocene. It is likely this occurred in the 1950’s.

Since that time the impact of human activity on planet has escalated at an unprecedented rate affecting all elements of the earth system. This has been the result of a huge increase in the exploitation of the planet’s natural resources, escalation of pollution, environmental degradation and species loss. The planet is rapidly warming at a time when it should be cooling. One can see evidence of this as the great ice sheets in Greenland and the Antarctic melt at an accelerating rate. Much of the Arctic sea ice has gone and permafrost is thawing releasing methane gas. We are now witnessing extreme weather events on a scale and frequency well above, by orders of magnitude, that could be explained in terms of natural variability.

As Will Steffen stated recently the Holocene is gone and we will not get it back. The climate emergency is real and there is an imperative to act now and reduce global greenhouse emissions to avoid runaway climate change but that on its own will not be sufficient. It will also be necessary to reverse the impact of much of the human activity on this planet ie pollution, environmental degradation, forest clearing and species loss which has weakened the earth’s self regulating capacity and given us even less time to act.  

This is the world we must plan for.