‘Eye-watering’: climate change disasters will cost Australia billions each year, study finds
Catastrophes like fires and floods could set the economy back more than $1.2tn by 2060, even if action is taken Climate change-related disasters will cost Australia $73bn a year by 2060, even if action to curb emissions is taken now, a report has found. And if nothing is done to tackle climate change, that figure will grow to $94bn a year by that date, a study by Deloitte Access Economics says. The report , commissioned by the Australian Business Roundtable for Disaster Resilience and Safer Communities (ABR), found the cost of inaction on climate change to date, and forecast the price tag in three scenarios: low, medium and high emissions. Under low emissions, climate change is contained to a 1.7C increase above pre-industrial levels, with emissions falling to zero by 2100. The medium scenario means emissions start to decline by 2045, while under high emissions there are no efforts to curb them, causing temperatures to rise more than 2C by 2040, and 3C after 2060. The report said the cumulative bill for Australia would run into the trillions over the next four decades. Over the next 40 years, the cost of natural disasters to the Australian economy is expected to be at least $1.2tn in present value terms, the report said. This cumulative cost would potentially increase by $125bn if a higher emission scenario eventuates. The report found two-thirds of the cost will be borne by Queensland and New South Wales, with Melbourne vulnerable to flooding events due to its proximity to major rivers. Australia is already heavily exposed to natural disasters fire, flood, hailstorms and hurricanes that currently cost the country $39b a year. This figure is expected to rise dramatically as property values increase and more people move into areas vulnerable to extreme weather events that hit harder and more often. The nightmare scenario would be a change in weather patterns causing a hurricane to land in south-east Queensland, which has been heavily built up by development. It adds to a growing body of work in Australia and elsewhere that has sought to measure the risks of the climate crisis, including another by London-based thinktank Chatham House in September that considered the impact from climate change tipping points. Dan Gocher, the director of climate and environment at the Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility, said even under a low-emissions scenario the figures in the report were eye-watering and should serve as a call to action. This research quantifies the cost of doing nothing about climate change, Gocher said. Its the perfect riposte to those who repeatedly question the cost of reducing emissions. Erwin Jackson, policy director at the Investor Group on Climate Change, said Australia was highly exposed to the physical impacts of climate change and the government alone could not foot the bill. He said the private sector would invest in resilience and adaptation measures but needed clear policy direction. That had begun with a positive response by government to the bushfire royal commission, and the creation of a National Recovery and Resilience Agency, but more was required, he said. We look forward to more discussions with the government about how we unlock private sector capital to build resilience to the impacts of climate change, he said. Ian Dunlop, from the thinktank Breakthrough National Centre for Climate Restoration, said the report was very useful in confronting decision-masters with the implications of climate change but the insurance sector was being coy about the issue. He said deep cuts in emissions were required now to limit the rise in temperatures. If you dont do that, its game over, he said.