The Sun (Malaysia)

Sydney records hottest November night

Temperatur­es soar above 40°C as heatwave sweeps city

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SYDNEY: Australia’s largest city recorded its hottest November night as Sydney suffered through a weekend heatwave that saw daytime temperatur­es peak above 40°C.

The overnight temperatur­e did not drop below 25.3°C on Saturday into yesterday in central Sydney, according to the meteorolog­y bureau, making it the hottest November night since records began.

The temperatur­e had already hit a scorching 30°C by 4.30am yesterday, before reaching above 40°C for the second consecutiv­e day.

“New South Wales is in the midst of a severe heatwave with very warm conditions already being experience­d yesterday (Sunday), and today being a repeat of some of those conditions,” said the Bureau of Meteorolog­y’s Agata Imielska.

Daytime records for November fell elsewhere in Australia’s southeast, with the outback towns of Griffith and Mildura reaching 43.2°C and 45.7°C respective­ly on Saturday.

The heatwave saw bans on lighting fires imposed across large swathes of New South Wales (NSW) state, which was badly hit by catastroph­ic bushfires during the last southern hemisphere summer.

A number of blazes broke out yesterday, including one on Sydney’s western outskirts that the NSW Fire and Rescue Service said damaged a property.

More than 60 bushfires were still burning across the state, but most had been brought under control by firefighte­rs as a southerly wind change led to a rapid drop in temperatur­es.

It was the first burst of significan­t bushfire activity since the devastatin­g 2019-2020 fires, which burned an area roughly the size of the United Kingdom and left 33 people dead as tens of thousands fled their homes.

The fire season also killed or displaced nearly three billion animals.

The latest heatwave comes just two weeks after government scientists warned the fossilfuel reliant country should brace for worse to come, predicting climate change will continue to exacerbate bushfires, droughts and cyclones in Australia.

Conservati­ve Prime Minister Scott Morrison has repeatedly played down the link between climate change and the bushfires, and has committed to keeping Australia as one of the world’s leading fossil fuel exporters.

But Australian­s are increasing­ly concerned about climate change, with a recent poll by Sydney’s Lowy Institute showing almost 90% believing it is a critical or important threat. – AFP

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