Transcript Document
SoE 2011 – Antarctic chapter overview
This presentation is one of a series of Australia State of the
Environment 2011 (SoE 2011) report presentations given by
SoE Committee members and departmental staff following
the release of the SoE 2011 report.
This material was developed as part of an oral presentation.
The full report should be referred to for understanding the
context of this information.
For more information please refer to:
http://www.environment.gov.au/soe/index.html
Or contact the SoE team via email:
[email protected]
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New cover page
Presentation – SoE 2011 Antarctic chapter overview
www.environment.gov.au/soe
Photo: Aerial view of the Pilbara, by Andrew Griffiths, Lensaloft
State of the Environment reporting
A report on the Australian environment must be tabled in
Parliament every five years
No current regulations regarding scope, content or process
All reports so far written by independent committees
www.environment.gov.au/soe
Purpose of SoE 2011
Provide relevant and useful information on
environmental issues to the public and decisionmakers...
… to raise awareness and support more informed
environmental management decisions …
… leading to more sustainable use and effective
conservation of environmental assets.
www.environment.gov.au/soe
State of the Environment 2011 Committee
Chair
Tom Hatton (Director, CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country)
Members
Steven Cork (research ecologist and futurist)
Peter Harper (Deputy Australian Statistician)
Rob Joy (School of Global Studies, Social Science & Planning, RMIT)
Peter Kanowski (Fenner School of Environment & Society, ANU)
Richard Mackay (heritage specialist, Godden Mackay Logan)
Neil McKenzie (Chief, CSIRO Land and Water)
Trevor Ward (marine and fisheries ecologist)
Barbara Wienecke – ex officio (Australian Antarctic Division, DSEWPaC)
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What’s new in 2011?
Improved relevance to decision makers
More detailed information
Discussion of the major drivers of change
Wide range of credible resources used in the analyses
Report-card style assessments of condition, pressures and
management effectiveness
Discussions of current resilience and future risks
Outlooks
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Quality and credibility
Independence – written by an independent committee with
relevant expertise, tasked with advocating for ‘accurate, robust
and meaningful environmental reporting and identification of
policy issues, but not for any particular policy position’
Authors sought best available evidence from credible sources
Extensive consultation
Workshops to determine consensus in expert opinion where
evidence low
Transparency about quality of evidence and level of consensus
Peer reviewed (47+ reviewers of chapters and supplementary materials)
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SoE 2011 Products
Full report – hard copy and online
Summary with 17 headlines
Nine theme chapters – each with key findings
Report cards
In-Brief – hard copy and online
50 page summary of full report
Additional online materials
Commissioned reports
Workshop reports
Additional tables and figures
Peer review information
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Assessment summaries in the report
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Drivers chapter – context for rest of SoE
How are a
changing
climate,
population
growth and
economic
growth creating
pressures on
our
environment?
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SoE 2011 Headlines
17 headlines
in summary
chapter give a
high level
overview of
the big issues
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Key Findings (in theme chapters)
‘key findings’
give an
overview of
more specific
conclusions
for each
theme
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What is the general state of the environment?
Much of Australia is in good condition shape or improving
Wind erosion has decreased
Some major threats to vegetation cover are lessening
Water consumption has fallen considerably in recent years
Many urban air pollutants are on the decline
Use of public transport is on the rise
Other parts are in poor condition or deteriorating
The East Antarctic Ice Sheet is losing billions of tonnes of ice a year
Soil acidification and pests and weeds are affecting large areas of the
continent
Our natural and cultural heritage continues to be threatened
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Drivers of environmental change
The principal drivers of pressures on Australia’s
environment—and its future condition—are climate variability
and change, population growth and economic growth
It is likely that we are already seeing the effects of climate
change in Australia
The Australian economy is projected to grow by 2.7% per year
until 2050
Under the base scenario, Australia’s population of 22.2 million
people in 2010 is projected to grow to 35.9 million by 2050
We have opportunities to decouple population and economic
growth from pressure on our environment
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Persistent pressures on our environment
Past decisions and practices have left ongoing impacts on
our environment
Introduction of feral animals and weeds
Land clearing
Pollution
Unsustainable water resource management
Intense harvest of fish stocks
Lack of integrated and supported management
Our changing climate, and growing population and
economy, are now confronting us with new challenges
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About the Antarctic environment chapter
101 pages
30 figures and tables
15 assessment tables
234 references
Photo: Doug Thost
8 case studies
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Key findings
The ozone hole has largely protected East Antarctica from
global warming
The East Antarctic Ice Sheet is losing ice at its coastal fringes
Major regional changes are occurring in Antarctic sea ice
coverage
The Southern Ocean is getting warmer
Increased acidification of the Southern Ocean can affect the
base of Antarctic food webs
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Key findings
Antarctic vertebrates are highly specialised; capacity to adapt
to climate change is unknown
The terrestrial ecosystems are changing
The pressure of human activities is increasing
The natural heritage of Macquarie Island has suffered under
the impact of introduced species, but a large-scale eradication
program is underway
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Introduction
Antarctica covers an area of about 13.8
million km2, with diverse ecosystems and
habitats, and a unique assemblage of
species
It is the earth’s coldest, highest, windiest,
and driest continent
Antarctica and the Southern Ocean are
key drivers of Earth’s oceanic and
atmospheric systems
The Australian Antarctic Territory (AAT)
makes up 42% of the continent
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Introduction
The Antarctic Treaty and Antarctic Treaty System provide the framework for
governance of the Antarctic region
The AAT is administered by the Australian
Antarctic Division of DSEWPaC
Australia maintains a permanent presence
with 3 continental stations, a station at
Macquarie Island and temporary field
stations
The Antarctic chapter focuses on the AAT,
incl. the subantarctic islands and Southern
Ocean
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State and trends
Antarctica is showing clear signs of climate change, esp. on
the Antarctic Peninsula, where temperatures have risen by
5oC over the last 50 years.
Slower rate of change in East Antarctica.
Continental ice sheet is getting smaller
Reduced duration of annual sea ice
Increased ocean acidification
Photo: Doug Thost
Effects include:
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State and trends – Continental ice sheet is getting smaller
Ice mass changes for entire
Antarctic ice sheet (2002-2009)
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State and trends – reduced duration of annual sea ice
Trend map of Antarctic annual
sea ice duration (days/year)
Yellow = basically unchanged
Green = up to 3 days less
Purple = up to 6 days less
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State and trends – increased ocean acidification
Global monthly mean CO2
concentration (2007-2011)
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State and trends – other effects of climate change
Incursions of alien species into the region, e.g. King crab
(Paralomis elongata), and competition with natives
Photo:Jane Wasley
Photo: Sharon Robinson
Changes in veg. communities, e.g. Antarctic bryophytes:
well-developed community
moribund bryophytes
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State and trends - vertebrates
Antarctic species are well adapted to Antarctic conditions;
capacity to adapt to climate change is unknown
Subantarctic islands have a legacy of introduced species
with high impact, e.g. rabbits on Macquarie Island
Some populations of seals and penguins that were
slaughtered in the late 19th/early 20th centuries have
recovered
Greatest threat to seabirds is probably IUU fishing
Most whale species visiting the Southern Ocean are
on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species
Photo: Nick Rains
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State and trends – natural heritage
Australia’s two subantarctic island groups (Heard/McDonald
Islands, and Macquarie Island) were added to the World
Heritage List in 1997, and the National Heritage List in 2007
Australia also manages 11 Antarctic Specially Protected Areas,
and 2 Antarctic Specially Managed Areas
all are currently assessed as being in ‘Good’ condition, except for
Macquarie Island, which is ‘Poor’ but improving
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State and trends – historic heritage assessment summary
Pressures affecting the Antarctic environment
Antarctica is changing at an increasing rate due to global
warming, esp. West Antarctica and Antarctic Peninsula, where
temperatures have risen by 5oC over the last 50 years
Slower change in East Antarctica, though rate expected to
increase
Resulting increases in temperature and ocean acidification
affecting ecosystems; capacity to adapt unknown
In certain regions, snow fall is being replaced by rain, altering
ecosystems
Extreme weather events likely to increase in frequency and
perhaps intensity as planet warms
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Pressures affecting the Antarctic environment
Human activities in closer proximity:
ca. 53 000 people visited continent in 2010-11
ca. 4000 people work on continent each year, on existing
research bases (4 bases are Australian)
New research stations being built
Tourism growing annually
Visits lead to: — erosion, disturbance of habitats and wildlife
— pollution, introductions of invasive species
Commercial fishing esp. of krill
IUU fishing a significant problem
Pollution elsewhere affects Antarctica
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Pressures affecting the Antarctic environment
Historic heritage – assessment summary
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“The Antarctic
increasingly will serve as
a barometer of change
and an indicator
of human impact
elsewhere in the globe”
Tony Press, Antarctica and
the future, in The Antarctic:
past, present and future,
Julia Jabour-Green and
Marcus Haward eds, 2001
An iceberg and new sea ice, Antarctica
Photo by Doug Thost
Management effectiveness
-
research & conservation
-
infrastructure
-
commercial tourism & fisheries
-
other activities e.g. private expeditions
Photo: Doug Thost
The main activities in Antarctica are:
Management is regulated through the Antarctic Treaty and
CCAMLR (the Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine
Living Resources).
The Australian Antarctic Division (AAD) administers Australia’s
Antarctic program.
Antarctic research in Australia provides a foundation for
management activities.......
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Photo © Tony Worby, courtesy Australian Antarctic Division
Some of the research.....
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Management effectiveness
Achievements by Australia include:
participation in international forums of the Antarctic Treaty
System
development of strategy for Antarctica’s Future
Environmental Challenges
reviews and environmental assessments of research
facilities of other countries
a leading role in discussions to improve conservation of
Antarctic marine living resources (as part of CCAMLR)
-
e.g. reducing IUU fishing, and the pursuit of sustainable fishing
practices that minimise seabird bycatch……
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Management effectiveness – case study
Commercial longline fishing operations killed tens of 1000s of sea
birds every year
Since 2002, ca. 40 000 white-chinned petrels killed on longlines
set in the southern Indian Ocean
Birds are attracted by the bait, become hooked, and drown
Scientists, policy makers and industry worked together,
Mortality of white-chinned petrels down 95%
Photo: Simon Bennet
developing heavier, integrated weight longlines that sink much
faster, greatly reducing seabird mortality
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Management effectiveness – case study
Mortality of birds in a
2002-2003 study
(Robertson et al. 2006)
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Management effectiveness – assessment summary
This summarises and assesses:
understanding of the issue(s)
planning
inputs
processes, and
outputs and outcomes
Photo by Graham Robertson
World Heritage and protected areas - assessed as ‘Effective’ or
‘Very effective’, all with a
trend
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Management effectiveness – assessment summary
Land use and management
Effective, most are
Adaptation to climate variability and change
Effective or Partially effective, all are
Pests and invasive species management
Effective or Very effective, most are
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Resilience
Organisms and ecosystems in Antarctica have evolved to cope
with severe natural conditions
However, their level of adaptability to human-induced change
or resilience is complex and difficult to measure
Therefore, difficult to predict how future climate change will
impact Antarctic ecosystems and species (limited information)
Several components are changing rapidly (e.g. temperature,
acidification), and there is limited information on:
-
possible interactions of these components
-
whether these changes are overwhelming the adaptive capacity
of biological and physical systems
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Risks
Key risks to the Antarctic environment are due to human activities,
incl. global population, economic pressures, and the effects of
climate change
While management can mitigate
many of the population/economic
impacts, climate change will be
the main and uncontrollable driver
of change
Antarctic expeditioner (Greg Hodge) framed by a crevasse
Photo: Doug Thost
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Current and emerging risks – assessment summary
Current and emerging risks – assessment summary
Almost certain
Catastrophic
Current and emerging risks – assessment summary
Almost certain
Catastrophic
Current and emerging risks – assessment summary
Almost certain
Catastrophic
Likely
Catastrophic
Outlook for the Antarctic environment
At present, Antarctica is still in relatively good condition
However, the existing pressures on the continent and Southern
Ocean will increase
Climate change processes will likely alter the physical Antarctic
environment in our lifetime; species must adapt or face extinction
With so many risks, climate change is a topic of intense ongoing
scientific research and debate, but there are still many data
deficiencies and uncertainties
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Other SoE 2011 content related to the Antarctic environment
Atmosphere – e.g. ozone layer, greenhouse gases
Marine environment – e.g. currents, marine jurisdictions
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Intentions and impacts of SoE 2011...
Based on available information and expert opinion drawn from
sources that are referenced in the report
Was designed to raise awareness and assist decision-makers
Highlights current issues that will require management
responses to influence projected trends
Provides critical information, but can support change only if
decision-makers consider and use it
www.environment.gov.au/soe
For more information
email: [email protected]
To order copies
email: [email protected]
phone: 1800 803 772 or read it online:
www.environment.gov.au/soe
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Photo: Aerial view of the Pilbara, by Andrew Griffiths, Lensaloft