Concerns over use of ‘cheap and easy’ offsets – as it happened
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More than 80% of council areas declared disasters in the past four years, Watt says
Murray Watt was hesitant to attribute the individual disaster in the Kimberley to climate change, unlike his colleague Chris Bowen. But he said the overall pattern of increasing disasters was undoubtedly climate change":
I don't think that you can point to one particular event and say it's due to climate change, but there is no doubt that we are seeing before our eyes is climate change happening. We know from all the scientists that we're going to be facing more of these intense events more frequently.
I was actually advised yesterday by our agency that just in the last 12 months we've seen 316 of Australia's 537 council areas disaster-declared: that's about 60% of the council areas in the country. And if you go back four years to the black summer, 438 council areas in Australia have been disaster-declared, which is over 80%.
A lot of people aren't aware but the wet season in northern Western Australia ... generally doesn't begin until later this month. So their wettest months actually tend to be February and March rather than starting as early as January. So to have this amount of water come through the system this early in the wet season is a concern.
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