Climate change and population
Blake Briggs writes: Re. “The dirty little secret to tackling climate change” (yesterday). Cathy Alexander’s article was an oversimplification of the maths of the link between emissions and immigration. To argue that Australia would have lower emissions if we had a smaller population is true, but ignores that there would be no net change in global population. There would therefore likely be no net change in global emissions, and no net global environmental gain … but hey, at least Australia would have reached a few of our own targets and would have bragging rights.
A flaw in my argument is that many immigrants to Australia come from poorer countries with lower emission per capita. Hence, once having immigrated to Australia a person’s emissions may be higher that they would have been in their country of origin because they live a higher standard of living here. But I don’t think Alexander was arguing we should cut immigration to compel people to live in poverty overseas so that their emissions are lower, allowing us that remain in Australia to stay higher on a per capita basis.
The true issue is: how do we achieve higher standards of living with lower emissions, regardless of which country you live in? Australia should be using its economic growth, which is strongly linked to population growth, to help fund a shift to low-emission electricity generation. Immigration seems only to be a decoy from self-interested “close-the-door” lobby groups.
Alan Baird writes: Cathy Alexander’s article has been, is and will be, on the money for years. In addition, nearly all of the migrant intake comes from countries of low emissions intensity and we quickly convert them to a (comparative) sky-high intensity, a considerable achievement. Does this mean we should import humans from Dubai instead and send back the rest? Or perhaps Kelvin Thomson should be silenced for stating the bleeding obvious? And what about the growth, mate? We gotta do that forever!
Charles Berger writes: Cathy Alexander acknowledges that her analysis of the link between population growth and greenhouse pollution is “rough and no substitute for rigorous modelling by teams of economists and demographers”. In fact, an interdisciplinary team of researchers from Flinders University and CSIRO were commissioned by the Department of Immigration and Citizenship to do exactly that a few years ago. Their final report, released in 2010, runs to over 300 pages. It defies easy summary, but it is certainly the most extensive and credible analysis of the physical implications of migration in Australia ever conducted.
On greenhouse pollution, the modelling supports Alexander’s analysis. A zero net migration policy would result in a 60% increase in greenhouse pollution from fuel combustion by 2050, whereas a net annual migration rate of 180,000 would result in a 170% increase. The study also found that higher rates of net overseas migration exacerbate a host of other environmental and quality of life pressures, including water use, urban sprawl, and traffic congestion.
An immediate move to zero net migration would necessitate cuts to the family and/or humanitarian migration stream, which some Australians would find unacceptable. However, a modest net migration level of around 50,000 is achievable through reductions in skilled migration and would lead to population stabilisation by mid-century.
It’s a pity this report has not attracted the media coverage or policy influence that it deserves. Having commissioned the work, it would be worth asking the department what steps they have taken in response to its findings.
Migrants to Australia are generally not the poorest in the world. Significant numbers still come from New Zealand and Britain. Those from China and India are often from affluent backgrounds. So you cannot assume an increase in emissions due to arrival in Australia.
In addition, the argument assumes that emissions are mainly generated by individual consumption. What about the emissions of export industries?
Instead of using the perennial immigration issue to make an environmental point, why not bring in a law which fines anyone having having more than three children? (And doing away with the baby bonus!)
Big business would hate it. Ditto lunatic religionists. Tony Abbott and his chorus of high kicking catholics would have a collective cardiac arrest. However, it would be a less racist
attitude.
Hi,
I am living here for ten years, arriving from Germany.
Did I increase the carbon footprint per capita? Most likely not.
I seem to use much less resources than the average Australian.
(Disclaimer: I love to live here – and I don’t want to be rude – take it a bit as “I love my wife but occasionally she bothers me: She is a bit messy”;-)
E.g. the water consumption for a family of four is average Australian – for a single person household. We are FOUR! And I’m not even trying to save, I just live and breathe and shower and water a few plants and do what I enjoy to do.
The same goes for other resources. Recently my colleague shocked me: she is paying $1500 for electricity, comes winter comes summer!
I told her about heaters you can program, the idea of having 23 degrees in summer and 19 in winter inhouse – not the other way around as I experience a lot – but no, “it’s uncomfortable”.
I find it strange. I feel very comfortable. Well, the houses could do with a bit more insulation and less gaps – that’s not only saves on heating/cooling, it feels more comfortable too.
The houses are amongst the biggest in the world. I just have one going up next to me. The garden will be gone, more or less. Most like three toilets for two people, though.
Australia could learn from migrants, and live more comfortable, if it comes to saving resources.
They also add innovation and progress to a country.
Migration is more than just a head count.
Regards
Peter
Or we could have a gander at cutting our per-capita emissions. Everything else is just accounting tricks – physics doesn’t care about borders.
+++ to what Peter said.