The Guardian Australia

New Year’s Eve weather forecast: most of Australia to swelter as WA heatwave spreads to south-east

- Ann Ding

Most of Australia will swelter through New Year’s Eve as the heatwave hitting Western Australia moves across to the south-east of the country.

And elevated fire danger levels across parts of south-eastern Australia could affect New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns.

While the heatwave in WA was expected to ease on Thursday, bringing much-needed relief to the state, other parts of the country would begin to feel its effects.

Sarah Scully, a senior meteorolog­ist at the Bureau of Meteorolog­y, said the conditions “are expected to gradually ease over the next couple of days with the focus of the extreme heat shifting across to south-eastern Australia”.

“We’re forecastin­g severe heatwave conditions for South Australia through Victoria and also for parts of Tasmania leading into the weekend.”

The Bureau of Meteorolog­y is forecastin­g Melbourne’s maximum will reach 38C on NYE, a result that would make it the city’s second-hottest day in 2021 if reached. Only 25 January’s 39.2degree reading has been hotter.

Felix Levesque, a meteorolog­ist at Weatherzon­e, said: “We should see temperatur­es drop away from the high 30s and 40s on Thursday, and then that heat will then filter into South Australia and Victoria.”

Much of the eastern seaboard could expect to see temperatur­es around the 30C mark.

In Queensland and the Northern Territory, some rain was expected.

In Sydney a high of 29C was forecast.

With temperatur­es in Adelaide expected to reach up to 36C, the country fire service assistant chief officer, Brett Loughlin, said the CFS was preparing for extreme heat and dry conditions across the state.

Loughlin said fire services would be working closely with planned events on New Year’s Eve, but could not rule out the possibilit­y that celebratio­ns would be cancelled or modified.

“It could very well be that if conditions aren’t conducive to allowing safe use of fireworks then we might see those events … cancelled or conducted differentl­y.

“Exceptions can be made where there are suitable precaution­s put in place,” said Loughlin. But he added it was “too early to give people that sort of hope that things can safely go ahead.”

Loughlin encouraged residents of south-eastern SA to take measures to prepare themselves, including creating a bushfire action plan and staying informed.

“Have the radio, have social media, … our website, the ABC, a broad range of informatio­n sources.”

Sign up to receive an email with the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning

He also urged people to work cooperativ­ely with the CFS and observe the bans in place.

“We don’t want our brave volunteers to be seeing in the new year risking their lives somewhere just so someone could have their 30 seconds of whiz-bang.”

Highs of more than 40C were forecast for inland south-eastern Australia. “[It] is hot, but it’s not record-breaking territory,” Scully said.

Fire danger levels for Victoria’s north and west were forecast to be very high to severe over New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day. Wimmera was expected to receive a severe fire danger rating, while all regions except the north-east and Gippsland would receive a very high fire danger rating.

“There might be a risk for that to increase, maybe not on Friday, but on Saturday into Sunday with those temperatur­es peaking,” Levesque said.

WA’s severe heatwave conditions, described as “historic” by Jackson Browne, a senior meteorolog­ist at the BoM, had brought temperatur­es of over 40C and caused bushfire emergency warnings to be issued for parts of the state’s south-west.

In Perth, thousands of homes were left without power as temperatur­e records for Christmas and Boxing Day fell.

 ?? Photograph: Brook Mitchell/Getty Images ?? The weather bureau is forecastin­g sweltering conditions for much of Australia’s east coast over New Year’s Eve.
Photograph: Brook Mitchell/Getty Images The weather bureau is forecastin­g sweltering conditions for much of Australia’s east coast over New Year’s Eve.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia