The Borneo Post

Corals die, farmers suffer through Australia’s third-hottest year

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SYDNEY: Australia had its thirdhotte­st year on record in 2017, the country’s weather bureau said yesterday, as global warming changed the continent’s climate and farmers warned unpredicta­ble seasons are hurting the US$ 47 billion agricultur­al sector.

Unusually, the high heat last year came despite the absence of an El Nino weather system in the Pacific, which tends to warm Australia, the Bureau of Meteorolog­y said in its annual climate statement.

“I think what it illustrate­s is even without the strong driver of an El Nino, the world is still producing very warm temperatur­es,” Blair Trewin, a senior climatolog­ist at the bureau told Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n radio.

During 2017 hotter ocean temperatur­es near Australia’s northeast coast prompted “significan­t” coral bleaching along the world- heritage- listed Great Barrier Reef, the first time it had occurred in consecutiv­e summers.

The national mean temperatur­e was nearly one degree Celsius above average, with the heat “mostly associated” with humancause­d global warming that also reduced rainfall in Australia’s south, the bureau’s statement said.

That made for the driest September ever recorded in crucial grain- growing regions of New South Wales and the MurrayDarl­ing riverbasin, with heavy rains then hitting during harvest and making it even more difficult for farmers.

The world’s fourth largest wheat exporter is set for its smallest crop in a decade.

“It’s really the unpredicta­bility of it rather than the actual event,” said Matt Dalgleish, a market analyst at agricultur­al advisory firm Mecardo.

“Farmers are used to dealing with different weather as long as it can run within a reasonably predictabl­e pattern and sit reasonably close to the seasons they expect — it’s when you get these events that are uncharacte­ristically out of season that cause the most amount of heartache.”

Seven of Australia’s 10 warmest years have occurred since 2005, the bureau found, and another hotterthan-average year is expected in 2018, which has already brought heatwave conditions to the country’s southeast. — Reuters

 ??  ?? File photo shows people enjoying the hot weather at Bondi Beach during the Labour Day holiday in Sydney. Australia sweltered through its third-hottest year on record in 2017 despite the lack of a warming El Nino weather phenomenon, official figures...
File photo shows people enjoying the hot weather at Bondi Beach during the Labour Day holiday in Sydney. Australia sweltered through its third-hottest year on record in 2017 despite the lack of a warming El Nino weather phenomenon, official figures...

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