The Government has offered Australia's three mobile operators, and vividwireless, renewal of their existing spectrum allocated on 15 year licences in the late 90s and early 2000s at set prices, while the Government expects to rake in $3 billion.
A report co-authored by Australia's leading Government funded scientific body and the Bureau of Meteorology has concluded that man made greenhouse gases is having alarming consequences for the climate of the Western region of Australia.
Research will be stepped up into the causes and
magnitude of climate change in Western Australia following the release
of a report showing that observed temperature increase and winter
rainfall decline in south-west Western Australia are unlikely to be due
to natural climate variability alone.
According to the Indian Ocean Climate Initiative (IOCI) - a partnership
of the State Government of Western Australia, CSIRO (Commonwealth
Scientific and Industrial Rsearch Organization), and the Bureau of
Meteorology - the region's climate is likely to continue to become
warmer and drier over coming decades due to the increase in greenhouse
gases.
CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research scientist, Dr Bryson Bates, says
there is increased confidence in how the climate of south-west Western
Australia will change due to increasing greenhouse gas concentrations,
but that the IOCI team will now do further work to understand climate
change across the whole of the state.
"The next phase of IOCI will be a much bigger research effort than ever
before," Dr Bates says. "Following the great strides forward we have
made in understanding the climate of the south-west, we will now
investigate other aspects of the West Australian climate, particularly
in the economically important north-west."
"We need to improve our understanding of the contribution to climate
change in the region from factors such as the Asian Brown Cloud, and
improve our understanding of tropical cyclones in the north-west."
Dr Bates says the IOCI research team have already used climate
projections from nine climate models to understand how climate may
change in the south-west.
"Our results show that by 2030 there would be a rise in temperatures in
all seasons and a decrease in winter rainfall," he says. "Rainfall may
decline by as much as 20% relative to the 1960-1990 level, with the
number of winter rain days decreasing by up to 17%, and runoff in
south-west WA catchments consequently decreasing by between five and
40%."
"By about 2085, these changes may further increase, with rainfall
declining by between five and 34%, and the number of winter rain days
decreasing by up to 30%," Dr Bates says.
Dr Pandora Hope, from the Bureau of Meteorology Research Centre, says
that IOCI's results also provide increased confidence in the causes of
recent past climate changes in south-west Western Australia.
"The sudden decline in south-west Western Australian early winter
rainfall that occurred in the 1970s, and has continued since, is
occurring because the potential for storm development over this region
has decreased due to much weaker winds in the upper atmosphere," Dr
Hope says. "In the next phase we will investigate how much of this
change might be explained by natural variations in the climate or if
this is a consequence of human activity."
The researchers also identified that since the mid-1970s there has been
a decrease in the number of winter weather systems that bring wet
conditions and an increase in the number of systems that bring dry
conditions.
"It's unlikely the observed warming is a result of natural climate
variability alone," Dr Hope says. "And the observed rainfall decline in
south-west WA is likely to have been caused by both natural
fluctuations and increases in greenhouse gas concentrations."
As announced today by the WA Environment and Climate Change Minister
David Templeman, the next phase of IOCI will continue until 2011 to
help decision-makers make plans to adapt to future climate change and
variability.
David Bass
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