Climate change could wipe over $570 billion off the Australian property market, according to a new report from the Climate Council.

 

“The property market is expected to lose $571 billion in value by 2030 due to climate change and extreme weather, and will continue to lose value in the coming decades if emissions remain high,” said climate risk expert and report author, Dr Karl Mallon.

 

“This is the largest analysis of property risk from climate change ever undertaken in Australia and uses the latest data from our universities,” he said.

 

The Compound Costs report concluded that climate change poses a major threat to the country’s financial stability and represents a serious risk to Australia’s broader economy.

 

“Some Australians will be catastrophically affected by climate change. Low-lying properties near rivers and coastlines are particularly at risk,” said Dr Mallon.

 

“Increasingly, Australians are also going to struggle to pay for home insurance. On current trends, by 2030, one in every 19 property owners faces the prospect of insurance premiums that will be effectively unaffordable,” he said.

 

“Even for Australians who can afford to pay, general insurance currently does not cover damage from coastal inundation and erosion: events which are likely to become more common because of climate change,” said Dr Mallon.


Other key report findings: