Australia’s
2014 Heat Wave Picks Up Where 2013 Left Off
A map showing the highest temperatures recorded in Australia between Dec. 29, 2013-Jan. 4, 2014.
Source: Bureau of Meteorology.
9
January, 2014
The
U.S. may just be climbing out of the freezer,
but Australia has been sweating through a major heat wave to
start the year. Heat records fell across a large part of the country
in the first week of the New Year. The warm weather is currently
centered over sparsely populated Western Australia, but it could
hit major population centers along the east coast by late next week.
The
Australian Bureau of Meteorology released a special
statement to chronicle the extent of the heat wave and its
movement. While noting that it didn’t affect as wide an area as the
January
2013 heat wave, the statement said the heat wave has been,
“highly significant with substantial areas having their hottest day
on record.” The heat wave comes on the heels of Australia’s
hottest year on record during which a slew of records were
shattered, including the country's
hottest summer.
During
the most recent heat wave, dozens more records were set, including
some by large margins. Narrabri, located about 320 miles northeast of
Sydney, saw the thermometer hit an eye-popping 118°F on January 3.
That surpassed the previous record by 6.5°F, which is the largest
margin for an all-time high temperature record at an Australian
weather station with 40 or more years of data. In Gunnedah Research
Center, located 265 miles northeast of Sydney, temperatures rose to
114.6°F. That topped the previous high by 5°F. The station has
records going back 76 years and is part of Australia’s long-term
climate network. Overall, 34 locations across the country with 40
years or more of data had their hottest day on record.
Adverse
effects of the hot weather have been felt across Australia. Reports
indicate that 100,000
bats dropped dead in Queensland. Ranchers have also been
forced to slaughter
more cattle, and Australia’s herds could be at their lowest
level in four years, according to Reuters. The Australian Department
of Agriculture has also warned that with temperatures running 16–20°F
above average for Queensland, South Australia, and Western Australia,
wilted crops and increased fire danger are major concerns.
The
heat was particularly overwhelming in the state of Queensland. The
state had its ninth-hottest day on record on December 29, topping out
at 106.3°F. However, it set an all-time record on January 3 when the
maximum average temperature across the state was a sweltering
107.3°F.
In
addition, 12 stations across Queensland, New South Wales, and South
Australia all saw temperatures rise above 118.4°F over the
first three days of the New Year. The hottest temperature recorded
over that stretch was 120.7°F, which occurred in Moomba, South
Australia on January 2.
Since
then, the heat has moved to the territory of Western Australia. The
Bureau of Meteorology has a few pockets on its forecast high
temperature map shaded
deep purple, a color it famously added to its temperature maps
during last year's January heat wave. Those areas in far Western
Australia are forecast to reach near 122°F on Friday
afternoon.
A
map showing the heat wave forecast for Australia starting on Monday.
Source:
Bureau of Meteorology.
A
"blocking" area of high pressure has kept high temperatures
mostly at bay from Sydney and Melbourne, Australia’s two largest
cities, but the respite could come to an end next week. By
Monday, the Bureau of Meteorology puts Melbourne on the fringes of a
severe heat wave. The Sydney Morning Herald reports the city could
feel
the heat by January 16.
Karly
Braganza, manager of climate monitoring at the Bureau of Meteorology,
told
the Associated Press that climate change may have played a role
in the current heat wave. Research suggests that manmade climate
change has increased
the odds of heat waves around the globe. Last year’s scorching
summer and record heat wave in Australia were attributed in part
to an increase in atmospheric greenhouse gases from to human
activities.
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