Mindanao Times

Summers grow longer due to climate change

AUSTRALIAN summers are lengthenin­g by a month or more while winters are getting shorter due to climate change, according to an analysis by a leading think tank released Monday.

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The Australia Institute said large swathes of the country were experienci­ng an additional 31 days of summer temperatur­es each year compared to the 1950s.

While Sydney was just under the average with an extra 28 hot days a year, Melbourne added 38 warmer days since the middle of the 20th century.

In some regional areas ravaged by bushfires in recent months, such as the New South Wales town of Port Macquarie, residents are now experienci­ng seven more weeks of typical summer temperatur­es.

“Temperatur­es which were considered a regular three-month summer in the 1950s now span from early-to-mid-November all the way to mid-March,” Australia Institute climate and energy program director Richie Merzian said.

“Summers have grown longer even in recent years, with the last five years facing summers twice as long as their winters.”

Australia’s capital, Canberra, lost 35 winter days while the city of Brisbane, in the country’s east, lost 31 cooler days.

Merzian said global warming was making the country’s summers increasing­ly dangerous, with less time in winter to carry out bushfire prevention work and extreme heat causing health and economic impacts.

“Extreme heat events are the most fatal of all natural hazards and have been responsibl­e for more deaths in Australia than all other natural hazards put together,” he said.

Australia’s latest summer heralded a devastatin­g bushfire disaster in which more than 30 people died, thousands of homes were destroyed and at least a billion animals perished.

The crisis led to renewed calls for the country’s conservati­ve government to cut the emissions contributW­ITH

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