Is Australia Getting Harder To Live In?

Update: see link below kindly supplied by Big M

According to Scomo it is.

And are natural disasters becoming worse and more frequent?

If you listen to or look at commentary in the mass media and social media, largely fuelled by politicians and journalists with no contact with nature and no life experience, you might think so.

The Conversation says:

It’s too soon to say whether the current floods are directly linked to climate change. But we know such disasters are becoming more frequent and severe as the climate heats up.

Time for a reality check.

Flood and fire and famine are the three great normals of Australia, as so well expressed by Dorothea McKellar in My Country, and we in the north also have cyclones.   

First, floods.  Brisbane was hit hard by floods last month.  Figure 1 is from a previous post, showing historic floods in the Brisbane River with the 2022 flood inserted.  No cause for alarm there.

Figure 1: Historic Brisbane Flood heights 

What about fatalities?  Figure 2 shows the 2022 floods compared with some historic floods from all over Australia.  Fatalities are totalled if several floods occurred in one year.

Figure 2:  Death tolls of flooding events

Are flood disasters getting deadlier? No.

Fatalities and housing damage are the result of people living in flood prone areas- or from being trapped in vehicles in rising waters.   After the 1916 flood, the people of Clermont in Queensland moved their town to higher ground- without any government assistance.  This photo from Bonzle shows the Commercial Hotel being moved on log rollers by a steam traction engine.  The Commercial is still standing- I’ve had a few coldies there.

Figure 3: Moving the Commercial Hotel to higher ground

And no one asked where Billy Hughes was.

What about fires?

Figure 4 shows the area of land burnt by bushfires by notable fires across Australia.  I have marked some fires that are fairly well known- but does anyone mention the fires of the 1960s and 1970s?  These were in largely savannah country of WA, Queensland, and the NT.

Figure 4:  Area Burnt by Bushfires

Figure 5 shows fatalities due to bushfires.

Figure 5:  Bushfire Fatalities 1920-2020

Despite the terrible 2009 fires, fatalities due to bushfires in the last 100 years have been trending down.  Lessons must be learned from these tragic events.  We should remember that fire is part of the Australian bush.  Many fatalities occur where housing is surrounded by bushland, with poor escape routes.

The downtrend in fire fatalities is even more apparent when you consider Australia’s population has grown enormously since 1920.  The following plot shows how the risk of death by bushfire has changed.

Figure 6:  Bushfire Fatalities per 1,000 people 1920-2020

No, by no measure are bushfires getting worse, or making Australia harder to live in.

Droughts are also in decline across most of Australia.  The following plots use BOM data.

Figure 7:  Percentage of Land in Severe Drought (lowest 10% of rainfall)

Even though 2019 was an extremely dry year, over 120 years the area of land in drought is decreasing at the rate of 0.23% per decade.

The only areas where drought has increased are Southwestern Western Australia, Victoria, and southern South Australia. 

In southern Australia as a whole, there is no trend in droughts, even with the 2018-2019 drought.

Decadal averages are an excellent way of showing long term patterns.  In southern Australia the worst period of long lasting dry years was the 60 years from 1920 to 1980.

Figure 8:  Percentage of Land in Severe Drought- Decadal Averages Southern Australia

But are dry periods getting drier, and wet periods wetter?  And are dry areas getting drier, and wet areas wetter?  Here are long term rainfall records for Sydney, Cairns (very wet) and Alice Springs (very dry), and Adelaide (drying trend) again with decadal means.  Values are anomalies from months of overlap of weather stations, in millimetres of rain.

Figure 9:  Decadal Mean Rainfall- Sydney

The three major droughts stand out, as does the major reset of the 1950s.  Note the decreasing values to the 1940s, and again from the 1960s.  There is no indication of wet periods getting wetter and dry periods drier.

Figure 10:  Decadal Mean Rainfall- Cairns

Figure 11:  Decadal Mean Rainfall- Alice Springs

It seems that dry periods are getting wetter at Cairns and Alice Springs, and apart from the 1970s-1980s, wet periods show no great difference.

Figure 12:  Decadal Mean Rainfall- Adelaide

Here we see the gradual fall off in rainfall in southern SA, gradually since the 1930s but more rapidly since the 1970s.  The shift in the Southern Annular Mode has caused drying in southern parts of the continent.  It is too early to draw any conclusions from that.

The alternately wet – dry feature of Australian climate is obvious from all the above plots.  However, wet periods are not getting wetter, and dry periods are not getting drier.

What about cyclones?  Here is a plot straight from the Bureau:

Figure 13:  Tropical Cyclones 1970-2021

Cyclones are NOT becoming more frequent or more severe.  The trend is clearly downwards.

Finally, heatwaves.  In reality we have no idea, as the temperature record managed by the Bureau is so bastardised- as shown here, here, here, here, here, and here.  We just don’t know, no matter what they claim.

Those who live in the cities, who have little contact with nature, and who have no knowledge of the history of Australia’s climate, will accept whatever they’re told about natural disasters as gospel.  The truth is different.

Scomo has nothing to worry about (apart from the next election).  Australia is NOT getting harder to live in: floods, fires, droughts, and cyclones are NOT getting worse or more frequent. 

UPDATE: Big M has kindly supplied this link, which I missed.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-05-26/australias-hidden-history-of-megadroughts/100160174

The 1760s WA drought seems to match data from the Barrier Reef showing a 30 year drought in NQ.

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4 Responses to “Is Australia Getting Harder To Live In?”

  1. tonyryan43 Says:

    We owe you a debt of gratitude, Ken, especially those of us who seek actual evidence of change in our world and who do not accommodate beliefs.

    And at the risk of generating a collective roll of eyes, may I reiterate what I have been preaching for decades… our biggest enemy is BELIEF.

    I define BELIEF as the adoption of an attitude or position despite the evidence. This comes perilously close to a definition of insanity.

    AGW alarmists are driven by belief. Fears of global Islam are driven by belief. Fears of covid are driven by belief. Fear of Putin and Russia is driven by belief.

    We are controlled by these absurd beliefs, yet they are entirely unsubstantiated. And belief feeds on ignorance, which we now have a lot of since the collapse of education and parenting, and the News Corp tsunami.

    Keep this up, Ken. You provide us with evidence that is getting hard to find.

  2. Phill Says:

    Thank you Ken,

    Australia has always been “a land of droughts and flooding rains”, as immortalized in Dorothea Mackellar’s great poem, My Country, written over one hundred years ago. That we are subject to endless cycles of droughts/fires and floods should be the understood starting point.

    A truly competent response would be to assess the risks and take appropriate action. After the 1970’s floods our Government here in Victoria adjusted the planning laws to stop all new development within 3m of the 500 year flood height. Dams can be built to both mitigate floods and subsequently provide water for agriculture and help weather drought. After cyclone Tracey hit Darwin a whole new building code was implemented to at least partially cyclone proof buildings. Roofs had to tied down to walls etc.

    I came through the Otway ranges at the weekend and the local authorities were beginning to burn the undergrowth now the weather was cooler to reduce the fire load and hopefully prevent out of control fires in the future.

    I remember a few years back listening in horror as reports were coming in that if the cyclone heading towards Townsville was to make a direct hit at high tide whole suburbs would have gone under. The solution here is either to build a seawall or simply not allow housing on land that can be inundated by the sea.

    Australia is not getting harder to live in and many steps have been taken in the right direction but collectively we need to refocus on learning to live with the hand we’ve been dealt.

  3. Big M Says:

    Ken, I’m sure you have read this on our ABC: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-05-26/australias-hidden-history-of-megadroughts/100160174 which kind of blows apart the narrative of droughts getting worse due to AGW, yet the ABC continues to peddle such nonsense.

  4. kenskingdom Says:

    (from Bill, who can’t comment directly)

    Thanks for the excellent new post.
    The Population has increased massively in the past 60 odd years. In
    1950 it was just 8 million. The population of Australia is now
    approaching 25 million.
    The housing, employment sites & infrastructure for much of this
    increased population are often in areas prone to fire, flood or drought !
    And so many many more people are afraid of flood or drought or fire
    happening.
    And many many more people are affected when it actually happens.
    Thus there is a lot more ‘panicing’.
    Which of course is money for the media & ‘opportunities’ to grandstand
    for pollies.

    Bill

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