China Daily

Aussie towns among hottest spots amid heat wave

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SYDNEY — Australian towns were among the hottest places on Earth this week as a severe heat wave hit the continent’s southeast, with forecaster­s warning of more record-breaking temperatur­es before the weekend.

The past four days were among the country’s top 10 warmest on record, with temperatur­es nearing 50 C in some spots, the Bureau of Meteorolog­y said Wednesday.

“With South Australia breaking some all-time records yesterday, it would certainly put this region as one of the warmest parts of the world yesterday, if not the warmest,” the bureau’s senior meteorolog­ist Philip Perkins said.

“The places that broke records yesterday are already warmer at this time today as they were yesterday.”

High temperatur­es are not unusual in Australia during its arid southern hemisphere summer, with bush fires a common occurrence.

But climate change has pushed up land and sea temperatur­es and led to more extremely hot days and severe fire seasons.

Among the towns in South Australia state experienci­ng their hottest temperatur­es on record on Tuesday was tiny Tarcoola in the region’s far north, which reached 49 C.

The city of Port Augusta recorded a temperatur­e of 48.9 C, almost one degree higher than its previous record set on Feb 7, 2009 — the same day Victoria state endured the devastatin­g “Black Saturday” bush fires that left 173 dead in the nation’s worst natural disaster.

The desert town of Coober Pedy — where some residents live undergroun­d to escape the harsh conditions — equaled its temperatur­e record of 47.4 C.

In the state’s capital Adelaide, where cycling’s Tour Down Under and the cricket One Day Internatio­nal between Australia and India were being held, athletes sweltered through a maximum temperatur­e of 41.9 C.

Overnight temperatur­es were also set to remain high, before a rapid change to cooler conditions from late on Thursday when a cold front currently over the Southern Ocean sweeps across southern Australia, Perkins said.

“Everything’s sort of a bit of a pressure cooker at the moment, and everything’s getting hotter and more humid and we’re all doing a slow clap waiting for this change to come through,” he added.

Australia’s creatures, already battered by a drought plaguing the east of the vast continent, are also feeling the heat.

Up to 1 million fish are believed to have died along the banks of a major river system, with authoritie­s warning of more deaths to come as temperatur­es soar.

The New South Wales state government said it would install aerators in some waterways to keep the levels of oxygen up for fish to reduce the likelihood of more mass deaths.

 ?? ROBERT CIANFLONE / GETTY IMAGES ??
ROBERT CIANFLONE / GETTY IMAGES

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