Half a century ago, Richard Gun stood on the floor of parliament and became the first known Australian political figure to warn about the âsinisterâ threat posed by climate breakdown. Todayhis maiden speech is a distant memory.
âI never thought of myself as the first politician to issue a warning about climate change,â he says. âAt the time it seemed to me an existential threat to our civilisation and it seemed like a sufficiently important issue to mention.
âLooking back, Iâm a bit surprised other people didnât take it as seriously.â
As Australia prepares to participate in Cop29 in Baku, Azerbaijan, Gunâs largely forgotten warning provides a poignant milestone to help measure the countryâs action on the climate emergency.
With greenhouse gas emissions rising, fossil fuel production expanding, and devastating fire and floods becoming more frequent, the scale of these threats underscores the warnings given by political and scientific leaders all those years ago â and the amount of wasted time.
Gun is a retired doctor who remains involved with the University of Adelaide and is still active on the issue of climate breakdown. When he first entered parliament in 1969 as the newly elected Labor member for Kingston in Adelaideâs southern suburbs, he was 33 years old.
He began his March 1970 speech by addressing what he called âthe problem of citiesâ and highlighting âan alarming tendency to put cars first and people lastâ. Halfway through, he pivoted to another issue he was deeply concerned about â growing concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
âBut, whatever these ingenious proposals can do in reducing smog, they still cannot prevent consumption of oxygen and production of carbon dioxide,â he said. âIt is the rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide which may be the most sinister of all effects.
âThe only way that this can be controlled is by reducing the amount of combustion taking place.â
The statements were found by Dr Marc Hudson, a climate and energy transitions academic who says that until Gun there was âno good evidence that Australians were paying close attentionâ to growing concerns about the greenhouse effect like people were in the US.
âAfter Gun we start to find other people in federal parliament raising alarm early in the early 1970s,â Hudson says. âThis matters because it should make us cautious about the idea that what is lacking is information. It forces us think about [how] this is also about resistance to change â psychologically, economically and financially.â
Senate committeeâs air pollution warning
Gun partly attributes his awareness about climate breakdown to the joint Senate select committee on air pollution, which published the results of its investigation in 1969.
Though its focus was air pollution more broadly, the Senate committee directly addressed the risk posed by the climate crisis: âMan has been using the atmosphere as a huge rubbish dump into which is being poured millions of tons of waste products each year,â it said.
The report did not return to the issue again but its warning marks the first known time an arm of the Australian government recognised the impending threat â an insight that appears to originate with remarkable evidence given by the Tasmanian scientist Prof Harry Bloom.
Bloom was the chair of chemistry at the University of Tasmania. His initial scientific work concerned molten salts and he briefly had a stint with the storied Truesdail Laboratories in the US.
At a hearing in Hobart on 6 February 1969, Bloom delivered an impassioned speech â described by one senator present as an âaddressâ â which outlined his frustration that no one was talking about the threat posed by growing carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere.
âIf carbon dioxide built up to such an extent in the Earthâs atmosphere as to trap radiation from the sun and cause climatic conditions to change all over the world, perhaps heating the whole world and melting the ice caps, nothing could be done about it at that stage,â Bloom said. âAt this stage, when we recognise the problem exists we ought to do something about it before it becomes too late.â
When challenged by a senator who suggested he was overreacting, Bloom insisted he had âseen some very highly scientific studies of this matterâ but did not name which, even as he insisted there was âno doubtâ he was correct.
Bloom was ahead of the curve but his early warning has received little recognition. Graeme Pearman, the renowned Australian scientist who first began investigating the science of climate change at the CSIRO, met Bloom later in his career but said he âhad no inklingâ the chemist had an interest in the issue.
Bloom passed away suddenly, aged 70, in 1992. His son, Walter, who maintains a collection of his fatherâs papers, says he was surprised to learn about his fatherâs early concern over climate breakdown. He also does not know where his father first encountered the issue.
Walter does, however, remember the fierce backlash that followed his fatherâs fight on environmental issues, an experience that foreshadowed the campaign against climate science.
Bloom later advocated for phasing out leaded petrol but is best known for raising alarm about heavy metal pollution in the Derwent River from heavy industry.
In response, a local paper ran a front-page story labelling him âThe Prophet of Doomâ and Walter recalls how the wives of fishers organised an âoyster-bakeâ where they spent a day eating river shellfish to prove there was no issue. At one point, Walter recalls someone scrawled a swastika on the front fence of the family home.
âI remember the police and the efforts to clean this thing off,â Walter says. âYou have to realise that we had no Jewish upbringing whatsoever ⦠I think of a line that is often falsely attributed to Albert Einstein that says: âTwo things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity.â
âPeople get emotional about these things. They think that their livelihood is in trouble, or their friendâs livelihood is in trouble, or they wonât be able to eat oysters again, so they react.â
Today the University of Tasmania awards a prize in Bloomâs name for the best honours thesis in chemistry. Prof Anthony Koutoulis, the universityâs deputy vice-chancellor of research, says Bloom should be lauded.
âHarry Bloomâs foresight was extraordinary â he anticipated the environmental crises we now grapple with daily,â Koutloulis says.
âHis work highlighted the vital role of science as both an early warning system and a call to action. At a time when few were listening, Bloom was sounding the alarm about the planetary costs of inaction.â
When it comes to the âcalamitous failure of the political consensus to follow scientific consensusâ in Australia, Gun says that he did not anticipate the level of pushback from industry or the level of climate denial that he later witnessed.
âIt still astonishes me. To deny the greenhouse effect is to deny the laws of physics. Why otherwise clever people would take such a position is a mystery,â he says.
Though he says Australia is getting âback on trackâ after the Abbott years, as a much older man, Gun now has a âmuch more desperateâ warning as he watches the country continue to open new coalmines and expand gas production.
âI am not yet convinced the opportunity for change has been totally lost, but overall Iâm not optimistic,â he says.
âIâve only got one great-grandchild, but I donât want any more because Iâm fearful they are going to inherit a planet that will be barely livable.â