Navigating the Anthropocene’s rivers of risks - climatic change and science-policy dilemmas in Australia’s MDB
Victoria's Alps - headwaters of the Murray Basin - likely to yield much less water in drier futures -Photo Jason Alexandra

Navigating the Anthropocene’s rivers of risks - climatic change and science-policy dilemmas in Australia’s MDB

Climatic Change (2021) 165:1 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-021-03036-w

The full paper is available https://rdcu.be/cf24a

The Productivity Commission recognises that Australis's water planning must prepare for climate change futures. In this account of the MDB climate risk assessments, published in the Journal Climatic Change, I argue why this will require some fundamental changes to way we use science to support policy development. Jason Alexandra

Navigating the Anthropocene’s rivers of risks - climatic change and science-policy dilemmas in Australia’s Murray Darling Basin

Abstract

Water extraction is fundamentally altering many of the world's rivers, floodplains and wetlands, while drying trends intensify competition for water resources. Climate change is challenging integrated water resource management policies that aim to balance human and environmental water needs. This paper explores the challenges of managing natural resources in a regime of climate change. It examines Australia's Murray Darling Basin, where national water law requires a Basin Plan based on best available science. However, proactively responding to climate risks is institutionally and politically complex, even though understanding of the Basin’s hydro-climate system has improved. Despite decades of research consistently warning of a drying climate, the Basin Plan relied on historical hydrological data to determine future water resource availability. The paper uses the heuristic of the science-policy interface to examine why there were no significant adjustments to account for climate change. This analysis finds that the science-policy interface is highly politicised, with different risk cultures in the scientific, governmental, political and commercial sectors constraining adaptation planning. These constraints need to be overcome because the changing nature of the Anthropocene's rivers means adaptive policy and institutional frameworks are needed that can navigate the complexities, uncertainties and indeterminacies of a changing climate.  

Keywords: risk cultures, adaptive governance, hydro-climatic research, science-policy interface, post-normal science, Murray Darling Basin

The full paper is available https://rdcu.be/cf24a

Craig Copeland

Founder of OzFish Unlimited

4y

Great paper Jason - if a bit frightening. Love to get your view on putting expansion of permanent plantings of almonds into this thinking

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Janice Taylor

Environmental Water Professional | Passionate Naturalist | Volunteer | RBMS | Nature-based Art

4y
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Roger Jones

Professorial Research Fellow at Institute of Sustainable Industry and Liveable Cities, Victoria University

4y

Thanks. Will read - one of the NSW irrigation activists recently got in touch. Interesting chat, but different views though to resolve.

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Vicki Manson

Head of the Australian Climate Service

4y

Thanks for sharing Jason. I will have a good read and perhaps reach out to further discuss.

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