1280px-Bush_fire_at_Captain_Creek_central_Queensland_Australia By 80 trading 24 - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0
1280px-Bush_fire_at_Captain_Creek_central_Queensland_Australia By 80 trading 24 - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0

BRIEFING: November bushfires - are they exceptional, could they have been prevented and is climate change to blame?

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Bushfires are raging across the country, with particularly fierce fires in QLD and NSW. As the country burns, some politicians have pointed the finger at 'greenies', claiming environmental regulations have exacerbated the fires. So is this fire season unprecedented, could any of these fires have been prevented using fire-management practices, or through environmental regulation, or is climate change to blame? Join us for this online media briefing, when leading Australian experts will address these issues. A full recording of the briefing is available.

Organisation/s: Australian Science Media Centre, University of Tasmania, University of Wollongong, The University of New South Wales

Media Briefing/Press Conference

From: Australian Science Media Centre

BRIEFING: November bushfires - are they exceptional, could they have been prevented and is climate change to blame?

Bushfires are raging across the country, with particularly fierce fires in QLD and NSW.

Reports that more than 850,000 hectares of land in New South Wales have been razed since the start of this year's bushfire season suggest these fires may be unprecedented, and out-of-control fires continue to burn in QLD and SA.

As the country burns, some politicians have pointed the finger at 'greenies', claiming environmental regulations may have exacerbated the fires.

So is this fire season unprecedented, could any of these fires have been prevented using fire-management practices, or through environmental regulation, or is climate change to blame?

Join us for this online media briefing, when leading Australian experts will address these issues.

Speakers:

  • Professor David Bowman is Professor of Pyrogeography and Fire Science, and Director of the Fire Centre Research Hub at The University of Tasmania
  • Professor Ross Bradstock is Director of the Centre for Environmental Risk Management of Bushfires at the University of Wollongong
  • Dr Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick is a Future Fellow at the Climate Change Research Centre, UNSW

A full recording of the briefing is available here

Attachments:

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  • Australian Science Media Centre
    Web page
    A full recording of the briefing

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