Climate protests held worldwide as bushfires rage

Thousands of climate change protesters surrounded Sydney's Town Hall on Friday. Photo: Getty Images
Thousands of climate change protesters surrounded Sydney's Town Hall on Friday. Photo: Getty Images
Protests have been held in Australia and globally against the federal government's inaction on climate change, as bushfires continued to rage after months of destruction and at least 27 deaths.

Anger has spread worldwide, including London, where scores of people gathered in the Strand to denounce Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, branded by one placard as a "fossil fool". 

The bushfire crisis has added pressure on Morrison's conservative government to do more to combat climate change after Australia weakened its commitment to the United Nations Paris climate accord last year.

Friday's demonstrations came as authorities urged nearly a quarter of a million people to flee their homes and prepared military backup as soaring temperatures and erratic winds fanned bushfires across the east coast.

Major roads in Sydney were blocked as protesters chanted "ScoMo has got to go", referring to Morrison, while placard read 'Save us from hell'.

There were similar protests in Canberra, the capital, and Melbourne, where air quality turned so noxious this month that the two cities featured among places with the most polluted air on earth.

"Red Brigade" at demonstration against the Australian government's inaction over climate change...
"Red Brigade" at demonstration against the Australian government's inaction over climate change outside its London embassy on Friday. Photo: Reuters
More than 100 people chanted slogans outside the Australian High Commission in London. Banners said "Stop Killing our Planet (PLEASE)" and "Inaction against climate change, that's just not cricket".

In Santiago, Chile, people lay down on the road outside the Australian embassy.

Extinction Rebellion protesters joined the demonstration, blocking the road, banging drums and holding up traffic. A food trailer attached to a bike handed out free hot vegan food.

Londoner Peter Cole (76) held up a sign saying "Climate Change Denier Scott Morrison Fiddles while Australia Burns".

"I'm here because the Australian government is doing absolutely nothing to combat climate change. In fact they're largely denying it and they need to be put under a lot of pressure..."

In Chile, protesters lay on the footpath during a demonstration outside the Australian embassy in...
In Chile, protesters lay on the footpath during a demonstration outside the Australian embassy in Santiago. The placard reads:"Tell the truth. Photo: Reuters
Morrison has repeatedly rejected criticism that his government is not doing enough. On Friday, he told Sydney radio 2GB that it was disappointing that people were conflating the bushfire crisis with Australia's emission reduction targets.

"We don't want job-destroying, economy-destroying, economy-wrecking targets and goals, which won't change the fact that there have been bushfires or anything like that in Australia," he said.

The chief executive of German engineering giant Siemens said it will decide by Monday on its involvement in the development of a controversial Australian coal mine. Joe Kaeser was speaking after meeting climate activist Luisa Neubauer.

A demonstrator outside the Australian embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Photo: Reuters
A demonstrator outside the Australian embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Photo: Reuters
Friday's protests in Australia stirred debate, with Victoria state Premier Daniel Andrews saying they were wrongly timed and would divert police resources.

"Common sense tells you that there are other times to make your point," he told a televised briefing.

"I respect people's right to have a view, I tend to agree with a lot of the points that are being made - climate change is real - but there is a time and a place for everything and I just don't think a protest tonight was the appropriate thing."

Protesters in London on Friday. Photo: Reuters
Protesters in London on Friday. Photo: Reuters
Climate scientists have warned the frequency and intensity of the fires will surge as Australia becomes hotter and drier.

Australia has warmed by about 1 degree Celsius since records began in 1910, NASA climate scientist Kate Marvel said this week.

"This makes heat waves and fires more likely," she said on Twitter. "There is no explanation for this - none - that makes sense, besides emissions of heat-trapping gases." 

Comments

More emotion over fact, to push a fear based narrative.
Scitechdaily website gives a more informed view.
“ PyroCb events provide a pathway for smoke to reach the stratosphere more than 10 miles (16 km) in altitude. Once in the stratosphere, the smoke can travel thousands of miles from its source, affecting atmospheric conditions globally. The effects of those events — whether the smoke provides a net atmospheric cooling or warming, what happens to underlying clouds, etc.) — is currently the subject of intense study.”

If you know anything about Nuclear Winter Theory or have followed any of the geo engineering ideas to counter CC, you would expect the effect to be cooling.
As to the issue of the uniqueness of these fires, read some history.