Everybody Be Cool: Using Community Spaces to Manage Heatwaves

Coming into summer, how can we look after people who can’t stay cool in their own home during a heatwave? Greater Melbourne’s Regional Climate Change Adaptation Strategy funded a project called ‘Creating a Network of Safe Spaces for Extreme Heat Events’ to examine the activation of community buildings for vulnerable people within the Greater Melbourne Region.

Glaciers and Ice Sheets in a Warming World

From remote Antarctica to the towering Himalayas, accelerating ice loss under climate change casts a stark shadow over ecosystems, coastlines, and the equilibrium of our global environment. Glaciologists like Professor Andrew Mackintosh work to understand past glacier and ice sheet changes to improve future predictions – and that future looks bleak.

Preparing for the Inevitable: what a 50°C day means for Victoria’s food system

On the 3rd of July, the record for the average global air temperature was broken. The northern hemisphere’s summer reminds us that extreme heat events may be just around the corner. A 50°C day, which climate scenarios gave small comfort was still some time off, could happen any time. How prepared is Victoria’s food system?

The Burning Planet: Changing fire regimes across the world

Fire patterns are linked to climate conditions, and have been undergoing changes in tandem with anthropogenic climate change. We must understand these changes to more effectively forecast and manage fires for both human safety and the preservation of biodiversity. Kate Bongiovanni explores Dr Luke Kelly’s work on “pyrodiversity.”

Climate Notes

Climate Notes was an emotive, interactive exhibition and performance work that explores how we feel about climate change through music, letter writing and film. Developed by the Royal Botanic Gardens with funding from the Inspiring Victoria program, the project commissioned six Australian composers from different cities to write works evoking feelings about climate change and responding to the letters.