Remember How I Keep Mentioning the Drought?
It’s really bad.
The Prime Minister, John Howard, a hardened climate-change sceptic, delivered dire tidings to the nation’s farmers yesterday. Unless there is significant rainfall in the next six to eight weeks, irrigation will be banned in the principal agricultural area. Crops such as rice, cotton and wine grapes will fail, citrus, olive and almond trees will die, along with livestock.
A ban on irrigation, which would remain in place until May next year, spells possible ruin for thousands of farmers, already debt-laden and in despair after six straight years of drought.
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With paddocks reduced to dust bowls, graziers have been forced to sell off sheep and cows at rock-bottom prices or buy in feed at great expense. Some have already given up, abandoning pastoral properties that have been in their families for generations. The rural suicide rate has soared.
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Australians are among the world’s biggest per-capita energy consumers, and among the top producers of carbon dioxide emissions. Despite that, the country is one of only two industrialised nations - the United States being the other - that have refused to ratify the 1997 Kyoto protocol. The governments argue that to do so would harm their economies.
Aside from ’softening’ his position on global warming as of late, what does John Howard have to say about the situation?
Mr Howard acknowledged that an irrigation ban would have a “potentially devastating” impact. But “this is very much in the lap of the gods“, he said.
It’s not actually. It’s been in John Howard’s hands since 1996 and Australia is now reaping what his policies have sown.
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April 27th, 2007 at 12:12 pm
Incase you needed further reassurance, taken from today’s Age:
‘After last week telling people to pray for the rain now forecast to break across Victoria on Friday, Mr Howard said peoples’ prayers had worked.
“And they should stay on their knees and keep at it because we need lots, lots more,” he said.
“It’s only a beginning. I hope it continues, but it is promising.”‘
Enough said really…