The Guardian Australia

Australia ‘ill-prepared’ for food insecurity driven by war and climate crisis, former defence leaders say

- Daniel Hurst Foreign affairs and defence correspond­ent

Australia is badly prepared for food insecurity fuelled by the climate crisis and war, former military leaders have warned.

A new report, to be released on Tuesday, describes Australia and the Asia-Pacific as a “disaster alley” for climate change, but says government­s in Canberra have not properly planned for the impact of “cascading and compound events”.

The report, by the Australian Security Leaders Climate Group, cites prediction­s that 2C of warming may see south-east Asia’s crop production decline by one-third per capita by 2040.

It says small island developing states in the Pacific are especially vulnerable to the effects of drought and flooding on food production.

Ahead of the report’s release, the former Australian defence force chief Chris Barrie said a rapidly heating planet “fundamenta­lly threatens our ability to secure our food and water supplies”.

“It is clear that a lack of food – driven by war, climate change or a combinatio­n of both – can destabilis­e and lead to even more conflict,” Barrie said.

“Food insecurity is a growing crisis brought into the spotlight by the invasion of Ukraine, and it is a crisis that Australia is ill-prepared for.”

Neil Greet, a former colonel in the Australian army, said Australia needed to prepare for “big consequenc­es” from climate change. These would include disruption­s to Australia’s own food growing systems.

More broadly, Greet said food insecurity in the region would “drive political instabilit­y, conflict, and people displaceme­nt in ways that will significan­tly impact on Australia and the security of its people”.

The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, has accepted that the climate crisis poses national security risks and has promised to launch a climate security threat assessment.

This work will be overseen by the intelligen­ce chief Andrew Shearer, but with input from other agencies including the Department of Defence.

Greet said the terms of reference for that assessment should include “an examinatio­n of the threat posed by climate change to our food, water, agricultur­al systems and supply chains”.

Barrie and Greet are executive members of the Australian Security Leaders Climate Group, which notes that food scarcity has already become a contributi­ng factor to major conflicts around the world, including the Syrian civil war.

The group’s executive members also include Cheryl Durrant, a former director of preparedne­ss and mobilisati­on at the Australian Department of Defence, and John Blackburn, a former deputy chief of the royal Australian air force.

Its report argues the world’s “failure to address the root causes of climate warming will result in great pressure on the Australian defence force and emergency and disaster relief agencies to pick up the pieces in the face of accelerati­ng climate impacts”.

It urges Australia to adopt an accelerate­d path to net zero emissions, while also pushing for greater global ambition to tackle the climate crisis.

Australia should work “with big and small Asia-Pacific government­s to build alliances for climate action” and coordinate globally “to prevent irreversib­le tipping points”.

Sign up to receive an email with the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning

The report says the climate crisis “should be a primary focus of both economics and politics in Australia, with clear commitment­s to mobilise the resources necessary to address this clear and present danger”.

“Australia and the Asia-Pacific region are a ‘disaster alley’ for climate change, with more than half the world’s population, low-lying smallislan­d states, and most of the large cities vulnerable to sea level rise,” the report says.

It says the Coral Triangle, which includes Indonesia, the Philippine­s, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Timor Leste, contains three-quarters of the world’s reef-building corals and more than a third of the world’s coral-reef fish species.

“Nations in the Coral Triangle face the loss of their coral systems, the region’s most populous nations – India and China – will face increasing chronic water insecurity, and more extreme heatwaves will become unbearable in South and Southeast Asia,” the report says.

“The consequenc­es for Australia will be enormous: displaced people and nations, the economic impacts on major trading partners, supply chain disruption, geopolitic­al tensions, the need for more developmen­t support, and increasing demands for humanitari­an aid and disaster relief.”

The report also suggests that Central Asian countries, including Afghanista­n, face the risk of “increasing­ly dire water insecurity and internal displaceme­nt” while regional conflict over water rights “is possible in this strategic zone that stretches to Iran”.

The report urges the Australian government to boost the capacity of near neighbours to withstand climate change-driven food shocks and their security consequenc­es.

Australia could help deploy “a monitoring system to identify potential food insecurity hotspots, and commit to a programme to enhance food production capacity and resilience in the region”.

Within Australia, the report warns that more extreme weather events and unpredicta­ble impacts on food production would lead to more price and supply volatility. It says Australia’s supply chains “are precarious, being a geographic­al distant island in a hyperconne­cted global economy”.

In March, a separate report by Farmers for Climate Action predicted that empty supermarke­t shelves would become a more frequent sight for Australian­s.

The new agricultur­e minister, Murray Watt, told Guardian Australia earlier this month that he was open to the idea of a national food strategy, as government­s globally grapple with food security and supply chain issues.

 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images ?? A former colonel in the army said Australia needed to expect ‘big consequenc­es’ from climate change including disrupted domestic food growing.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images A former colonel in the army said Australia needed to expect ‘big consequenc­es’ from climate change including disrupted domestic food growing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia