When, oh when, is there going to be a similar report in New Zealand? And when will climate change get ANY coverage from ANY of the mass media?
‘Abnormal
autumn’ shows the climate system is in a foul mood
2
June, 2014
The
climate system is in a foul mood. From “angry summer” to
“abnormal autumn” – we’re running out of words to describe
the relentless extreme weather that Australia is experiencing as
global temperatures continue to increase because of climate change.
Now the exceptional heat has carried on into the autumn of 2014 in
Australia.
The
Climate Council’s latest report – “Seasonal
Update: Abnormal Autumn 2014” – delivers three key findings.
Continuing
warm trend
First,
the 24-month period ending with April 2014 was the hottest on record,
and once the data for May are analysed, that new record will almost
surely be immediately broken by the 24-month period ending with May
2014.
Second,
the average temperature across Australia for April was 1.1ºC above
the long-term average (1961-1990) and May continued this trend of
abnormally high temperatures.
Third,
the climate system as a whole is heating up and temperatures are
projected to increase, with more extremely hot days and fewer cool
days and the number of extreme fire-weather days is expected to
increase in southern and eastern Australia. So, we’re not likely to
get relief from warmer-than-normal conditions any time soon.
Abnormal
warm weather around Australia
The
abnormally warm weather that has seen records tumble during the last
two summers has continued into the autumn of 2014.
A
prolonged warm period from 8 to 26 May was experienced in South
Australia, New South Wales, Victoria, and southern inland Queensland,
with unusual warmth also extending periodically to Tasmania and parts
of the Northern Territory and southeastern Western Australia. Across
much of this region, maximum daily temperatures were 4-6ºC higher
than normal (the 1961-1990 average) and minimum (night time)
temperatures were also well above normal despite the clear skies,
which usually lead to lower night time temperatures.
Major
population centres experienced abnormal autumn warmth. Sydney,
Adelaide and Melbourne set records for the most consecutive days in
May of 20ºC or above with 28 days, 16 days and 13 days respectively.
Sydney experienced 19 consecutive days of 22ºC or above from 10 to
28 May, surpassing the previous May record of 9 days (set from 1 to 9
May 1978 and 1 to 9 May 2007).
Many
locations in every state except WA set records for high temperatures
so late in the autumn season. For example, Canberra recorded a
maximum of 21.7ºC on 26 May; previously the latest date a
temperature that high occurred in Canberra was 12 May, nearly two
weeks earlier. Also on 26 May Birdsville reached a high temperature
of 34.7ºC, the highest temperature reached so late in the season at
any Australian site outside of the tropics.
The
Australian area-averaged daily maximum was 27.35ºC or above on each
of the five days from 21 to 25 May, higher than any value previously
recorded on or after 21 May.
The
unseasonably warm conditions that many regions of Australia
experienced in April and May are likely to continue through winter.
Higher-than-average maximum and minimum temperatures are likely over
most of the country with the chances of warmer-than-average
conditions being particularly high for the southern half of the
continent.
The
odds are increasing that Australia could soon experience an El Niño
event, which would likely exacerbate the impacts of climate change by
driving temperatures even higher and triggering drier conditions in
the east and south of the continent.
Time
to act
With
the continuing plague of abnormally high temperatures across the
continent, the influence of climate change can be felt now. While
short-term weather patterns act as immediate triggers for extreme
weather – such as the slow-moving high pressure system in the
Tasman Sea that drove the warm conditions in May – all of these
shorter-term weather patterns are being influenced by the build-up of
heat in the climate system from the increasing amount of greenhouse
gases in the atmosphere. The warming climate increases the likelihood
of unusually warm and hot conditions, regardless of their immediate
triggers.
This
influence of climate change is evident in the long-term increase in
the intensity and frequency of many extreme weather events in
Australia and around the world, with serious and costly impacts on
our communities, infrastructure, economy, and the environment. The
frequency of record heat events has doubled from the middle of the
20th century to the present, and over the past decade, record high
temperature events are occurring three times more frequently than
record cold temperatures. Over the period since the 1970s, high
bushfire danger weather has been on the increase in southeast
Australia.
We
are halfway through the critical decade for action on climate change,
yet Australian emissions have still to make a decisive turn
downwards. It is time to take action on climate change or else the
climate system’s mood will only get worse, escalating risks for our
health and well-being, for many sectors of the economy and for the
natural ecosystems that we depend upon.
Will
Steffen
Adjunct
Professor, Fenner School of Environment and Society at Australian
National University
Australia
experiences its hottest two years on record
High
temperatures, which are forecast to continue through winter, are a
clear sign of climate change, report warns
2
June, 2014
Australia
has experienced its hottest two years on record and high temperatures
are set to continue through winter in a clear sign of climate change,
a report warns.
May
2012 to April 2014 was the hottest 24-month period ever recorded in
Australia, but that is likely to be eclipsed by the two years between
June 2012 and May 2014, according to the Climate Commission's latest
report, Abnormal Autumn.
"We
have just had an abnormally warm autumn, off the back of another very
hot 'angry summer'," Professor Will Steffen of the Climate
Council said.
"The
past two-year period has delivered the hottest average temperature we
have ever recorded in Australia.
"Climate
change is here, it's happening, and Australians are already feeling
its impact."
The
average temperature across Australia in April was 1.11C above the
long-term average, the report says, citing Bureau of Meteorology
figures.
The
average minimum temperature was 1.31C above normal.
Unseasonable
temperatures in the autumn "warm wave" set records, with
Sydney, Adelaide and Melbourne setting benchmarks for the consecutive
number of May days when the mercury reached 20C or higher.
In
its report, the Climate Council says the abnormally warm weather in
April and May "are part of a longer-term trend towards hotter
conditions in the summer months and more warm spells in autumn and
winter".
It
says each of the 12-month periods ending in January, February, March
and April 2014 have been record warm periods for Australia, with May
figures on track to also be a new high.
"Such
records are consistent with the ongoing global and Australia-wide,
multi-decadal trends towards a hotter climate," the report says.
Meteorologists
predict a high likelihood that Australia will experience an El Nino
event – characterised by below-average rainfall in the east and
south – in coming months.
The
Climate Council says an El Nino could worsen the impact of climate
change, leading to hotter, drier weather.
The
Climate Council is a crowd-funded, independent organisation created
by the members of the former Climate Commission, which was axed by
the Coalition government when it came to power in 2013
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