The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Record Australian heat brings fire to a scorched land

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SYDNEY: Firefighte­rs battled 25 blazes across the Australian state of Victoria yesterday as a record-breaking heatwave delivered the hottest start to March on record for the southern third of the country.

The continent is prone to deadly blazes thanks to its combinatio­n of remote terrain, high summer temperatur­es and flammable eucalyptus bush.

A severe four-day heatwave has brought fire weather across the southern parts of Western Australia, South Australia, Victoria and Tasmania over the weekend.

The south-eastern state of Victoria was the worst hit, with more than 2,000 firefighte­rs, water-bombing aircraft and volunteers battling blazes yesterday.

A cool change was forecast for late yesterday but an associated wind change would bring danger for firefighte­rs.

“It’s a dangerous time, putting it bluntly,” Victoria’s Emergency Management Commission­er Andrew Crisp said in a televised emergency briefing yesterday.

“Not just for communitie­s but for firefighte­rs.”

In 2009, the worst bushfires on record destroyed thousands of homes in Victoria, killing 173 people and injuring 414 on a day the media dubbed ‘Black Saturday’.

The largest fire in Bunyip State Park was sparked by multiple lightning strikes on Friday.

Rural townships were evacuated with no reported injuries or deaths, but three homes and several properties had been destroyed by noon yesterday.

Australia’s Bureau of Meteorolog­y said the heatwave, defined as three consecutiv­e days and nights of above-average temperatur­es, had broken more than a century of records.

“It’s broken heat records for March in four states along the southern coastline,” meteorolog­ist Dean Narramore told Reuters by telephone yesterday.

Temperatur­es in Tasmania, Australia’s southernmo­st state, reached 39.1 degrees Celsius on Saturday, the hottest in 131 years of records, Narramore said.

Australia’s hottest summer on record is causing several industries to wilt, including the US$4.4 billion wine industry with grape yields set to drop to the lowest in years.

Drought has also damaged the winter wheat crop and is expected to drag the wool clip to a record low.

The Pacific nation had its third warmest year on record in 2018, a year marked by severe drought in parts of the country and a prolonged bushfire season.

Australia continued the trend into 2019 with its hottest January on record. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Smoke rising from the bushfire burning in Victoria’s east. — Reuters photo
Smoke rising from the bushfire burning in Victoria’s east. — Reuters photo

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