Otago Daily Times

Longer wildfire seasons forecast for Australia

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SYDNEY: Australia’s climate will continue to warm, resulting in prolonged wildfire seasons and less rain in the southeast and southwest that will lead to more frequent droughts, the country’s weather bureau said yesterday.

Australia’s changing climate patterns can be attributed to an increase in greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide in the atmosphere triggering more extreme weather events, the Bureau of Meteorolog­y (BoM) said in its biennial climate report.

Australia’s climate has warmed on average by 1.44degC since 1910 and this will result in more wild fires, droughts, and marine heat waves, the report said.

‘‘Climate change is influencin­g these trends through its impact on temperatur­e, rainfall, and relative humidity, and the resulting change to the fuel moisture content,’’ BoM scientist Karl Braganza said.

Fires razed more than 11 million hectares (37 million acres) of bushland across the southeast early this year, killing at least 33 people and billions of native animals — a disaster that Prime Minister Scott Morrison called Australia’s ‘‘black summer’’.

Though Covid19 lockdowns helped cut global emissions, they were not enough to reduce the carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, said the report, prepared in collaborat­ion with

Australia’s national science agency CSIRO.

Morrison has refused to match other developed countries in setting a target for net zero carbon emissions by 2050 but has said that the country, in line with the Paris accord, expects to reach net zero emissions after 2050.

Longerlast­ing marine heatwaves will raise the likelihood of more frequent bleaching events in coral reefs, including the Great Barrier Reef. — Reuters

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