Sun, 17 May 2026
Australia News Updated May 17, 2026 · 10:46

Climate Change Could Quadruple Australia's Homelessness by 2035

A new study from the University of Sydney warns that Australia's homelessness could quadruple by 2035 under a high-emissions climate scenario. Climate-driven pressures like rising insurance costs and disrupted supply chains are expected to worsen housing stress nationwide. Even in a low-emissions scenario, homelessness could double and rental affordability decline by 23% compared to 2020. Researchers urge that future housing policies must undergo climate-change simulations to avoid deepening inequality.

I
IANS
· 2 min read · 74 views

Australia homelessness could quadruple by 2035 under climate pressure: Study

Canberra, May 17

Australia could see homelessness quadruple within a decade under a high-emissions climate scenario, a new study finds, highlighting the growing intersection between climate change and housing affordability.

The study finds that even well-intentioned housing policies could significantly worsen housing affordability and homelessness under the impacts of climate change, according to a statement from Australia's University of Sydney released Friday.

Researchers found that climate-driven pressures -- rising insurance costs, disrupted construction supply chains, and shifting investment behaviours -- are likely to intensify housing stress nationwide.

The study projects that homeownership could become twice as expensive, while rents may rise by as much as 45 per cent under a high-emissions trajectory.

Even in a low-emissions scenario, homelessness could double and rental affordability decline by 23 per cent compared to 2020 levels, reports Xinhua news agency.

Using nearly two decades of national housing, income, and demographic data, the researchers modelled how climate-driven shocks and policies interact to shape affordability, homelessness, and rental pressures.

They found that poorly designed policies that focus on insurance premiums or mortgage rates could deepen inequality by shifting financial pressure onto renters.

"Any new housing policies need to undergo climate-change simulations to make sure they don't deepen inequality," said Peyman Habibi-Moshfegh from the University of Sydney School of Project Management.

"Future climate shocks need to be factored in when developing new housing policies and plans," said Habibi-Moshfegh, lead author of the study published in the journal Cities.

— IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Suresh O
The point about insurance costs is very relevant for us too. After the Uttarakhand floods, many people in hilly areas can't even get home insurance now. If Australia is seeing this pattern, imagine how bad it will be for developing countries like India where government resources are stretched thin.
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Priya S
As someone who lived in Sydney for 5 years, I can tell you the housing crisis there is already bad. Rents are astronomical even now. This study is scary but necessary. India's urban planners should pay close attention - our metros are already unaffordable for middle class families.
R
Rajesh Q
Interesting but I'm skeptical about these long-term predictions. Climate models have been wrong before. Also Australia has the space and resources to adapt - they're not like densely populated countries like India or Bangladesh. Let's see actual data before panicking.
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Nisha Z
The most disturbing part is that well-intentioned policies could make things worse. In India, we see the same - subsidies for the rich, and the poor get pushed out. Australia should focus on building climate-resilient affordable housing, not just insurance fixes. Achha observation by the researchers.
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Varun X
While I appreciate the research, comparing Australia's situation to India's is apples and oranges. They have a much smaller population and can build outwards. Our challenge is different - how do we house 1.4 billion people in climate-safe places? We need our own Indian study focused on our specific geography.

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