Toxic Sydney bushfire haze a ‘public health emergency’

608

SYDNEY, Dec 16, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Australia’s biggest city is facing a
“public health emergency” over the bushfire smoke that has choked Sydney for
weeks, leading doctors warned Monday after hospitals reported a dramatic
spike in casualty department visits.

Hundreds of climate change-fuelled bushfires have been raging across
Australia for months, with a “mega-blaze” burning north of Sydney destroying
several homes overnight and fires near Perth threatening towns.

More than 20 medical groups including the Royal Australasian College of
Physicians — which represents 25,000 doctors and trainees — released a
joint statement Monday calling on Australia’s government to address the toxic
air pollution.

“The air pollution in NSW is a public health emergency,” the Climate and
Health Alliance said.

“Smoke from bushfires has produced air pollution of up to 11 times the
base ‘hazardous’ level in parts of Sydney and New South Wales.

“Bushfire smoke is particularly hazardous because of the high levels of
tiny particles (PM2.5).”

The New South Wales state health department said it recorded a 48 percent
increase in the number of people visiting hospital emergency rooms with
respiratory problems in the week ending December 11 compared to the five-year
average.

Visits spiked 80 percent on December 10, when air quality plummeted
across Sydney prompting up to 20,000 residents of Australia’s biggest city to
march in protest the following day.

The Climate and Health Alliance called on the government to take urgent
action to curb emissions, saying climate change is worsening bushfires that
are having “devastating impacts on human health”.

“The air pollution events resulting from bushfires will become more and
more frequent and are a result of climate change,” it said.

“Our governments must act quickly to rapidly and deeply reduce greenhouse
gas emissions, which we know are driving climate change.”

Prime Minister Scott Morrison last week made a rare admission that
climate change is one of the “factors” behind the fires, but defended
Australia’s record on emissions reduction and failed to announce further
measures to address the issue.

Six people have been killed, more than 700 houses destroyed and at least
three million hectares (7.4 million acres) of land burned this bushfire
season.

The devastating fires have focused attention on climate change, with
scientists saying the blazes have come earlier and with more intensity than
usual due to global warming and a prolonged drought that has also caused
towns to run out of drinking water and forced farmers off their land.

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg on Monday singled out bushfires and drought as
the biggest domestic challenges for the economy, telling reporters in
Canberra the dry spell had taken a quarter of a percentage point off GDP
growth and reduced farm output by “a significant amount” over the past two
years.

Official data shows 2019 is on track to be one of the hottest and driest
years on record in Australia, with the country set to experience a heatwave
this week that forecasters predict will break temperature records.