His comments came as US environmental activist Al Gore likened Prime Minister Tony Abbott's insistence that wildfires had nothing to do with changing climate patterns to the tobacco industry claiming smoking does not cause lung cancer.
Both Hunt and Gore weighed in on the issue after UN climate chief Christiana Figueres's assertion this week that there was "absolutely" a connection between wildfires and rising temperatures.
Australia has been battling massive bushfires that started in unseasonably hot and dry weather west of Sydney a week ago, inflaming the debate.
"I looked up what Wikipedia said, for example, just to see what the rest of the world thought," he said.
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"And it opens up with the fact that bushfires in Australia are frequently-occurring events during the hotter months of the year, large areas of land are ravaged every year by bushfires, and that's the Australian experience."
Abbott, a long-time climate change sceptic, this week accused Figueres of "talking through her hat", but former US vice president and Nobel laureate Gore said climate change clearly brought about more extreme weather.
"That's not me saying it, that's what the scientific community says."
In the BBC interview, Hunt took issue with the presenter quizzing him on Abbott's past description of climate change as "absolute crap".
"In parliament our prime minister has expressed clear support for the science," he said, before the presenter asked: "So (Abbott) no longer thinks it's absolute crap?"
"Look, with great respect you can swear on international radio, you can invite me from Australia to do this, you can be profoundly rude, I'm happy to answer, but I'm not going to be sworn at," Hunt responded.