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Sunday, December 22, 2024 | Digital Edition | Crossword & Sudoku

Extreme weather is scaring off tourists

More Australians are adjusting their holidays, concerned about extreme weather disrupting plans. (Dan Himbrechts, Darren Pateman/AAP PHOTOS)

By Katelyn Catanzariti

Summer might be synonymous with beach days and barbecues, but more and more Australians are re-imagining their hot season, concerned about extreme weather disrupting their plans.

Increasingly, Aussies are opting for safer destinations and cooler travel months to ensure their their hard-earned holidays aren’t scuppered by floods, storms, heatwaves or bushfires, a recent poll by the Climate Council has revealed.

Nearly two thirds of Australians with vacation plans are worried such weather events will interfere with their summer getaways, with that number rising to 75 per cent for young people aged 18 to 34.

More than half of the 1200 people surveyed believed bush camping was the holiday type most at risk from extreme weather, with remote destinations also flagged as vulnerable by 41 per cent of respondents.

Just this weekend ahead of Christmas, tourism operators in Victoria’s Grampians region were on edge and residents were preparing to leave as firefighters battled an out-of-control bushfire.

Soaring temperatures over the weekend were expected to exacerbate the blaze which began on Tuesday after a series of lightning strikes, and is expected to burn for weeks.

“We had a full house. It was the first time in six years that we’ve been able to get the occupancy up over Christmas and New Year period,” said Erin Hinchliffe, caretaker of the nearby Dunkeld Caravan Park, where there have been 30 cancellations.

More than half of the people surveyed by the Climate Council were worried regional economies reliant on tourism could suffer as holidaymakers steer clear of high-risk areas.

Climate Councillor Professor Lesley Hughes warned that worsening extreme weather, driven by climate change, is altering the Australian summer experience.

“More intense and frequent unnatural disasters are turning Australian summers from a season of joy to a season of dread,” Prof Hughes said.

“Families know their plans are increasingly at risk from floods, storms, heatwaves, or bushfires.”

The Climate Council’s analysis predicts a challenging summer for 2024–2025, with a hot and wet outlook for December.

The Bureau of Meteorology is forecasting unusually high rainfall for parts of Queensland, NSW, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, and Western Australia.

This is coupled with the risk of tropical cyclones in the north and fire hotspots in the south.

“There’s also the likelihood of hotter-than-average days and nights,” Prof Hughes added.

“This makes it harder to know where the safest, least impacted place will be for a family holiday.”

To adapt, many Australians are shifting their holiday plans. Avoiding bush camping and inland travel are common strategies, as people seek to minimise risks.

But the only way to mitigate the problem of tourism hesitancy is to take urgent action on climate change, Prof Hughes said.

“To avoid even greater summer holiday disruption in the future, it’s critical we slash climate pollution this decade,” she said.

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