The Borneo Post

Drought-hit Australia has third-warmest year on record in 2018

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MELBOURNE: Australia had its third warmest year on record in 2018, a year marked by severe drought in parts of the country and a prolonged bushfi re season, the Bureau of Meterology said, with the dry conditions expected to persist in coming months.

Maximum temperatur­es across Australia were the secondwarm­est on record at 1.55 degrees C above average, just behind the hottest year in 2013.

The average temperatur­e across Australia in 2018 was 1.14 degrees C above the average for 1961 to 1990, making nine of the past 10 years hotter than average, the bureau said in its annual climate statement. Annual rainfall was the seventh lowest on record over the southeaste­rn quarter of the country.

“It was a tough year for people dealing with the drought,” Bureau senior climatolog­ist Lynette Bettio said in a statement. The bureau sees little change in the near term.

“The next three months look like a continuati­on of the warm and dry conditions that we’ve seen actually over the last 24 months or so,” Karl Braganza, the bureau’s head of climate monitoring told reporters.

El Nino-like weather conditions that have prevailed in the Pacific Ocean could also suppress rainfall this year, although it was unclear yet how that would develop.

El Nino is usually associated with lower than usual rainfall in eastern Australia. For 2018, Australia’s rainfall was 11 percent below the average for 1961 to 1990 at 413 millimetre­s, which the bureau said was due to natural variabilit­y as well as climate change.

The warmer temperatur­es and a windy winter also meant more evaporatio­n, which led to a rapid and intense drying of the landscape, the bureau said.

Global warming is largely to blame for Australia’s bushfire season tending to start earlier in spring and extending into autumn, as opposed to just being during the hottest months in summer, Braganza said.

“The shift in the seasonalit­ies and the severity of the fire weather is largely driven by increases in surface temperatur­e, and that in turn is related to global warming,” he said.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File photo shows a truck stir up dust on a road behind a dam on farmer May McKeown’s drought-affected property located on the outskirts of the northweste­rn New South Wales town of Walgett in Australia.
— Reuters photo File photo shows a truck stir up dust on a road behind a dam on farmer May McKeown’s drought-affected property located on the outskirts of the northweste­rn New South Wales town of Walgett in Australia.

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