Jack Egan on ABC Radio

Published Fri 19 Sep 2025 at 6:00am

Listen to Jack Egan on ABC News

Up to 1.4 million people could die each year globally by the end of the century from extreme bushfires, air pollution and smoke conditions.

That's the findings from two independent modelling studies by Australian and international researchers if the world's carbon emissions remain as they are.

More Information Featured: Jack Egan, Black Summer survivor Greg Mullins, Emergency Leaders for Climate Action founder Dr Dwan Vilcins, University of Queensland's Child Health Research Centre group leader

Previous
Previous

“A culture of fear”: Bushfire survivor tells Senate inquiry how climate misinformation fuels trauma and silences voices

Next
Next

'Inside I was screaming': The unexplored trauma of sudden and extreme weather