Ajax wrote on Dec 23
rd, 2019 at 1:08pm:
So we don't have to give billions of tax payer dollars over to the oligarchy controlled United Nations and the stock market.
It will only warm up by 1°C end of this century.
That means we can spend this money on roads, schools, hospitals, projects here in Australia instead of lining the elite (1%) pockets. AJAX is a climate denying troll.
You can believe AJAX or you can believe science. I know which one I have chosen.
AJAX should be imprisoned for spreading dangerous and misleading information, endangering the entire country.
AJAX is a terrorist
Implications of climate change for Australia's national security Submission 47
Chapter 6
Conclusions and recommendations
6.1 The committee believes this was a useful inquiry to investigate the ability of Commonwealth agencies to respond to climate change in the area of national security.
The committee notes the consensus from the evidence that climate change is exacerbating threats and risks to Australia's national security. These include sea level rise, bushfires, droughts, extreme rainfall events, and higher-intensity cyclones. The committee was reassured that climate risks are being factored into preparedness policies and procedures at the whole of government level and by individual agencies, including Defence. There are well-established arrangements for states, territories and the Commonwealth to respond to domestic weather events and for the Commonwealth to provide regional humanitarian and disaster relief assistance (HADR).
6.2
Climate change is also adversely affecting other aspects of Australia's national security, including the economy, infrastructure, and community health and well-being. The committee did not receive substantial evidence on these matters, though some are being considered through other processes, such as Senate committee inquiries into the financial risk associated with carbon for businesses and the impacts of climate change on the built environment. In addition, a framework for a national strategy on climate, health and well-being was also recently released.[1] The committee's conclusions and recommendations focus on the areas where the committee received most evidence, including Commonwealth coordination, leadership, reducing climate risks, and building resilience in the region.