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Sydney faces hotter days, rising seas – report




SYDNEY, Australia, August 24 ------ The picturesque waterways and beaches of Sydney, Australia's "Harbor City," are "vulnerable" to substantial sea level rises unless a greater effort is made to reduce emissions, a government climate report warned. The New South Wales state government warned that Sydney could be 1.8 degrees Celsius (3.2 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer by 2050, and about double that by 2090, if warming is unchecked. The hotter temperatures would spell trouble for many coastal communities and those near tinder-dry bushland. 

  

Sydney Harbor — home to the Sydney Opera House and Harbor Bridge ֫— is "vulnerable," as are popular swimming spots along the eastern city's northern beaches, the report warned. Sea levels could rise by 56 centimeters (23 inches) by 2090 under a pessimistic scenario. But it is regional towns away from the coast that are likely to see the worst of the extreme heat, spending a third of the year sweltering in days above 35 C (95 F) by 2090. The report comes as authorities grapple with how to "future-proof" communities. Among the measures under consideration are shaded heat refuges where people can escape soaring temperatures, or ensuring hospitals have adequate resources to cope with heat-related illnesses. Penny Sharpe, New South Wales minister for climate change, said the state faced two options: address climate change now or wait for extreme weather events to cause damage. "This data will help protect critical infrastructure including hospitals, transport networks, dams and energy systems from climate change impacts, such as extreme heat, fires and floods," she said. 

  

Extreme heat 

This year is "increasingly likely" to be the hottest year on record, the European Union's climate monitor said this month. Extreme heat is already one of the biggest drivers of weather-related hospitalizations in Australia, national health data shows. Heat accounted for 7,104 injury hospitalizations and 293 deaths between 2012 and 2022. 

  

General practitioner Kate Wylie said the heat had also been linked to an increased number of heart attacks, incidents of domestic violence and suicidal ideation cases. She said there were simple things people could do to minimize their chances of heat-related injury, including drinking water and staying out of the heat, but governments needed to adapt cities as well. "Sydney has a noticeable problem where you have developments where there is no street shade, they all have black roofs which cost more to cool," said Wylie, also executive director of climate advocacy group Doctors for the Environment Australia. "The whole planet is getting hotter. The quicker we can transition to renewables the healthier we will be," she added.  

  

Source: manilatimes.net  

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