Droughts, heatwaves threaten as tropical zone expands

As the Earth’s tropical climate creeps out further, it will cause Australia to become hotter and perhaps fall into serious drought with the country suffering from a lack of rain, bringing with it disastrous consequences.

The tropical zone between the Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn has been expanded about 85km over a decade, which over 100 years is equivalent to the distance between Sydney and Brisbane.

Currently the tropical zone extends from the Andes in South America to northern parts of Argentina and Chile to the Sahara desert.

The Sahara is currently sitting on the edge of the tropical atmosphere, known as the dry subtropical zone of the tropics, and is known for hot and humid summers and mild winters.

If the rapid growth of the tropical zone continues, by 2100 the new dry subtropical zone would extend from Sydney to Perth.

As the dry subtropical zone moves towards Australia, the country will suffer from severe droughts and less rain will fall in warm regions.

Central Queensland University Environmental Geography Adjunct Professor Steve Turton told News Corporation as a result water storage in Perth was already a problem due to a decrease in the amount of rainfall and there was a drying trend across Australia, particularly in the south west.

“South west to Western Australia has dried significantly since the late 1970s,” he said.

“This means places like Perth, their storage of water is becoming an issue for them.”

Professor Turton said Tasmania was likely the only place in Australia that would be protected from the new dry subtropical zone, with rainfall in the state consistent.

Professor Turton told News the CSIRO and Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) expected more hot days with the expansion of the tropics.

“There’ll be more trapping of heat and gas in the atmosphere,” he said.

“A hot day is defined as over 35 degrees Celsius because the human body starts getting stretched when the air temperature gets over that.

“In Darwin, it on average has the highest number of hot days. There are about 47 days over 35°C each year on average.

“If we continue with business as usual, by 2090 Darwin could experience nearly 320 days a year above 35°C.

“And Darwin is on the coast, in places like Katherine it would probably be every day of the year. How do you manage to live there?

“Obviously all our cities will have more hot days and Darwin is an extreme case if we don’t bring emissions down.”

Professor Turton said Darwin’s string of hot days would be a worst-case scenario, but likely if the world did not work to lower greenhouse emissions and black carbon.

He said if countries stuck by their commitment to the United Nations sponsored Paris Agreement, a plan to stop the global average temperatures from rising 2.0°C by the end of the century, the effects of the expanding tropical zone wouldn’t be felt as hard.

However, Professor Turton said the global temperature had already risen 1.0°C since the pre-industrial revolution, leaving just 1.0°C to play with.

The effects of the growing tropical zone could also create problems for northern parts of Australia.

There are plans to further develop Australia’s north because the population is mainly in Cairns and Townsville, but this plan may not work due to the moving tropical zone.

“There is a big focus on developing Northern Australia for agriculture, tourism and obviously mining is a big industry,” Professor Turton said.

“The one thing I caution is climate change is going to be a problem for developing the north, mainly because of the heat. It will be the biggest issue, it’s already becoming a problem.”

Professor Turton said this year northern parts of India hit 50°C and last month the airport in Phoenix, Arizona, closed after hitting an extreme heat of 48°C.

“Phoenix has the population of Sydney. Can you imagine Sydney airport or other places inland not being able to run the economy because it’s too hot? These are big issues for the northern and southern parts of Australia.”

Professor Turton said severe weather events like heatwaves and droughts would occur more frequently and last longer.

“Sydney and Melbourne will have more hot days and hot spells,” he said.

Heatwaves with days above 40°C will become more common and Professor Turton said the cities could even have heatwaves that lasted for two weeks.

“Old people will be particularly vulnerable and people in the south where they aren’t used to the heat as much,” he said.

The heatwaves and lack of rainfall won’t just impact humans, but Australia’s entire ecosystem.

Professor Turton said animals would die out, farmer’s crops would struggle to handle the heat and Australia’s multi-million dollar wine industry could be destroyed.

Professor Turton said animals migrated when temperatures and weather conditions put them under pressure, but Australia was fast running out of land to which animals could move.

He said Australia needed to implement climate adaptation strategies immediately to control the effects of the earth’s bursting waistline.

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