Climate change is the most significant environmental challenge of the 21st century, with profound impacts on Australian outdoor environments. Addressing it requires solutions operating at multiple scales — from the actions of individual Australians, to national policies, to binding international agreements. This KK focuses on the range of solutions and mitigation strategies available, with attention to how they apply across different environments.
Mitigation: Actions that reduce greenhouse gas emissions or increase carbon sinks — addressing the cause of climate change.
- Examples: Switching to renewable energy, planting forests, reducing livestock emissions
Adaptation: Actions that help ecosystems and communities cope with climate change that is already occurring — managing the effects.
- Examples: Building seawalls, shifting agricultural crops, creating climate-resilient wildlife corridors
Both are necessary. Mitigation without adaptation ignores the climate change already ‘locked in’; adaptation without mitigation is a losing battle against escalating change.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Climate solutions require both mitigation (reducing emissions) and adaptation (managing existing impacts). A comprehensive response integrates both at local, national, and international levels.
The UNFCCC (1992) is the foundational international agreement on climate change — the framework within which all subsequent agreements operate. Australia is a signatory.
The most significant international climate agreement currently in force:
- Adopted by 196 parties in Paris, December 2015
- Goal: Limit global average temperature rise to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels, with efforts to limit to 1.5°C
- Mechanism: Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) — each country sets its own targets, reviewed every 5 years (ratchet mechanism)
- Australia’s current NDC: 43% emissions reduction by 2030 (vs 2005 levels); net zero by 2050
Limitations:
- No binding enforcement mechanism — countries set their own targets
- Current collective NDCs (as of 2024) put the world on track for ~2.5°C warming
- Developed countries committed to USD \$100 billion/year in climate finance for developing nations — target repeatedly missed
VCAA FOCUS: Know the Paris Agreement targets and Australia’s commitments. The exam may ask you to evaluate the effectiveness of international agreements — you should discuss both their achievements (global commitment, ratchet mechanism) and limitations (voluntary, inadequate current targets).
The Safeguard Mechanism (reformed 2023):
- Australia’s primary mechanism for reducing industrial emissions
- Covers ~215 large industrial facilities (mines, smelters, oil and gas facilities)
- Requires facilities to reduce emissions by 4.9% per year; can purchase Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs) to meet targets
- Targets align with Australia’s 43% emissions reduction commitment
Renewable Energy:
- Australia’s renewable energy share reached ~35% of electricity generation in 2023 (AEMO data)
- National Energy Transformation Roadmap: transition to ~82% renewable electricity by 2030
- Large-scale solar (e.g., Sun Cable project, NT) and offshore wind (e.g., Star of the South, Bass Strait) are key projects
Carbon Farming:
- The Australian Carbon Credit Unit (ACCU) scheme pays landholders for carbon sequestration — planting trees, improving soil carbon, reducing livestock emissions
- Generates income for landholders while storing carbon in outdoor environments
- Criticism: Some ACCUs have been issued for forests that were never at risk — ‘avoided deforestation’ controversy
Urban greening:
- Increasing urban tree canopy reduces the urban heat island effect — lowering cooling energy demand
- Melbourne’s Urban Forest Strategy targets 40% canopy cover in inner suburbs by 2040
- Green roofs, bioswales, and green walls reduce stormwater runoff and building energy use
Community renewable energy:
- Community solar schemes allow households without suitable roofs to access solar energy
- Hepburn Wind (near Daylesford, Victoria) — Australia’s first community-owned wind farm (2011); now supplies ~2,000 homes and generates community income
Biolinks and habitat corridors:
- Local councils and Landcare groups establish wildlife corridors connecting fragmented bushland — allowing species to migrate as climate zones shift
- Victorian Biodiversity Plan supports corridor establishment across the state
| Practice | Carbon Benefit | Outdoor Environment Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| Revegetation/reforestation | High carbon sequestration | Habitat restoration, biodiversity gain |
| Improved soil management | Soil carbon accumulation | Improved water retention, productivity |
| Wetland restoration | High carbon storage (blue carbon) | Biodiversity, water quality, flood mitigation |
| Reduced grazing pressure | Vegetation recovery, soil carbon | Ecosystem health restoration |
Blue carbon:
- Coastal ecosystems (mangroves, seagrasses, salt marshes) store carbon at rates far higher per hectare than terrestrial forests
- Australia has significant blue carbon assets — restoration of degraded coastal wetlands is a key opportunity
- The Blue Carbon Study (2018) estimated Australian blue carbon stocks; policy frameworks now support blue carbon offsets
| Environment | Key Mitigation Strategies | Key Adaptation Strategies |
|---|---|---|
| Alpine | Carbon farming on cleared lower slopes; renewable energy | Assisted migration of alpine species; snowfield diversification |
| Coastal | Blue carbon restoration; mangrove/seagrass protection | Managed retreat from high-risk areas; coral reef restoration |
| Temperate forest | Carbon forestry; cultural burning | Fire management reform; assisted migration |
| Rangelands | Soil carbon improvement; feral animal control | Drought-resistant species; managed grazing |
| Wetlands | Restoration for blue carbon | Environmental water management; invasive species control |
STUDY HINT: The exam may ask you to evaluate solutions for a specific environment type. Know the difference between mitigation (reducing the problem) and adaptation (coping with the problem) and be able to apply both types of solution to specific Australian outdoor environments.
COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes list solutions without evaluating them. A good answer considers: Is this solution scalable? Is it cost-effective? Does it have co-benefits (e.g., biodiversity, water quality)? Does it address equity (who benefits, who bears costs)?