16 December, 2019

Australia took a match to UN climate talks while back home the country burned

I’ve been at the climate summit in Madrid for the past two weeks. The question I was constantly asked was: “What will it take for Australia to treat the climate crisis seriously?” International friends, colleagues and strangers looked on in horror at the effects of the bushfires and outright amazement at the Morrison government’s denial of the link between the fires and Australia’s coal industry, and seeming lack of concern at this extreme impact of climate change.
A demonstrator with a mask attends a climate protest rally in Sydney last Wednesday as bushfire smoke choked the city and the Australian government used the COP25 Madrid climate talks in Spain to push for dodgy accounting tricks to halve it climate effort.
A demonstrator with a mask attends a climate rally
in Sydney last Wednesday as bushfire smoke choked
 the city and the Australian government used the
COP25 Madrid climate talks in Spain to push for dodgy
 accounting tricks to halve its climate effort.
Morning after morning I woke to check the news and the “fires near me” app. Seeking updates from friends. Was the Katoomba fire close enough to force evacuation of one? Had another been able to return to their house yet? How was the air pollution in Sydney? Was my partner, who is an asthmatic, coping?

Read the story from The Guardian by Julie-Anne Richards -“Australia took a match to UN climate talks while back home the country burned.”

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