WARNING: This post is a political piece which contains my personal opinions.
Whether we like it or not the G20 has arrived in Brisbane, the capital city of my home state, Queensland. Today is a declared public holiday for all who work in the Brisbane City Council area. I am included in that number. Even when I was in the city on Monday and Tuesday, there were barricades everywhere and the footpaths were literally swarming with police.
Powerful and influential leaders from nations across the world are descending as I write and the spotlight of the world media will be on Brisbane over the next 3 days. The total influx of people is in excess of 7,000. This includes support and security staff for the world leaders as well as a huge contingent of journalists and other other media staff.
So what is the G20? This link gives a brief, unbiased overview. In reality, Mr Putin is arriving with a flotilla of Russian warships steaming towards Australian waters, the USA and Chinese delegations fly in with the ink barely dry on an agreement to work together on greenhouse gas emissions and David Cameron has come to hang out with his ‘new best friend’.
Who knows what the weekend will bring. The one thing that we will all endure is hot weather. It does not matter whether you are a young child whose home is here or one of the most powerful leaders in the world – it will be hot – probably hotter on Saturday and Sunday than any previous November day on record in our city. This is not a one-off. It is indicative of our changing climate. Already, most of the temperature records are from the past 10 years, despite the fact that records have been kept for well in excess of 100 years in this country.
Mr Abbott does not think that the G20 is the right forum for discussions about climate change. That’s right, just continue to bury your head in the sand. We all know that you do not believe in the science of climate change. You have told us so, yourself.
I will not be protesting this weekend but I am sure that there will be others who do. They will have all sorts of items on their agendas that they want to put in front of this group of powerful and influential leaders.
My weekend will be spent making sure that my garden is kept well-watered and protected from the searing sun and heat as I do my best to ensure the survival of the food crops that I am growing to feed my family. I will also be thinking of those farmers who struggle to make a livelihood while doing battle with the increasingly extreme weather conditions. They do this in order to provide food to you and I. The advertisement below, was one which was banned by the Brisbane Airport Corporation as being “too political” for display during the G20. It features a South Australian grape producer, David Bruer. You can read more here.
While grapes and the end product, wine, may not be essential to our survival, agriculture in the broader sense is most definitely necessary.
Remember, Mr Abbott – without a planet there will be NO economy. Addressing the issues of climate change should be front and centre of any global economic forum.
I was looking for a final quote for this post and amazingly I found this. Need I say more?
One would almost think that Mother Nature is listening in and is turning on record November heat this weekend to remind those who deny climate change, that it is indeed very real! Happy Hot Weekend to them all!
Yes, one could say that the timing has been perfect!
Totally agree with all you say and think perhaps the $500million to put on this event could have been used to help in sustainable living research but oh no that’s right there is no climate change. Do you believe that Australia will be better off as a result of this circus.? Me thinks not.
Don’t even get me started on the money spent on staging this event. I know world leaders need to meet and that they need to be safe. Perhaps there should be a permanent underground bunker with appropriate security built and all of these events could be held in the same place without the disruption and cost to host cities.
Anyone who thinks that Australia is somehow going to better off is kidding themselves. That includes our Lord Mayor who seems to have some crazy notion that this is going to translate into more tourism for Brisbane. Why?
What’s wrong with tele-conferencing like companies large and small do. We attend webinars in our own office. Surely in this day and age they don’t even need to travel. I have just finished the big fortnightly shop on the ‘coolest’ day of the weekend since I have the public holiday and tried to stop cold items melting on the way home even in insulated bags. There will be no more crops in our gardens till about April as with both working fulltime we cannot sustain them.
A teleconference? Now there is a radical thought!!
I agree – we have said right from the start that video/satellite conferencing should be all that is needed in this day and age – why we have to spend all this money for the leaders of the world (who don’t seem to be doing much anyway!) to visit us is abominable when the economic climate is so bad. As for the tourism, I’m as dumbfounded as everyone as to why people should want to visit us just because we have/had the G20? And seems most people have deserted the place anyway, given it is a long weekend, going to be hot and nobody wants to be here.