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Article 2 - No shelter

No shelter from the storm: the unequal burden of a climate crisis within a housing crisis

Published on
3 July 2025

“No person, country or region will avoid the unpredictable and increasingly frequent extreme events that climate change will bring.”

Climate change is a defining challenge of our time. 

Amidst a cost-of-living and an escalating housing crisis — where the price of keeping a roof over one’s head is rising and housing supply across the spectrum remains critically low — the additional burden of climate disasters on those most marginalised is unmistakable. 

As Australia grapples with the escalating frequency and severity of extreme and unprecedented weather events, what becomes increasingly evident is this — disasters may be widespread, but they do not impact everyone equally. 

Homelessness Week 2025 is a timely reminder to reflect on what happens when we fail to support those most at risk and to confront the urgent need for systemic change. 

As climate change accelerates, so too do the risks for those without secure housing. 

Homelessness can take many forms, and a changing climate inevitably deepens its impacts. Disasters, such as increasingly severe storms, flooding, and heatwaves, directly and materially impact the living conditions, safety and context surrounding one’s life. This can include: 

Acute impacts — direct health implications experienced from changing weather conditions (for example, extreme heat or cold) or disasters, loss of material possessions or being trapped in unsafe areas with nowhere to go
Chronic impacts — disrupted support systems, decreased access to essential services or increased risk of becoming socially isolated
For those without shelter, these impacts are magnified. 

Climate change is not solely an environmental issue, it’s a human emergency. 

The Salvation Army’s Social Justice Stocktake has seen climate change become an increasingly urgent social justice concern within Australian communities. A Climate Council study found that an extraordinary 84 per cent of people in Australia have personally been affected by a climate event or extreme weather since 2019.

The devastation caused by ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred in Queensland is a recent example of the increased vulnerability experienced by those without a safe place to call home. Despite government efforts to provide additional resources to ensure those without a home were able to access shelter and support, frontline services were overwhelmed.

With limited essential personnel onsite and a surge in demand driven by not just those seeking support for the first time, but also those already in crisis — pressure fell on frontline community support services to mobilise outreach teams, deliver critical communication to those who might otherwise fall through the cracks, and to continue to provide care to those in need — all while also ensuring their own safety and that of their teams. 

What happens when the systems meant to provide safety and care are already stretched to capacity? Refuges are full. Hotlines inundated. And the result? Diminished ability to provide ongoing quality and timely care. 

When community members in distress are met with delays and detours, their trauma doesn’t pause, it deepens. This compounding trauma of an overburdened system is not just a side effect — it’s a crisis in its own right.

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