January
was hottest month on record in Sydney and Brisbane, says weather
bureau
Sydney’s
average maximum temperature was 29.6C and Brisbane’s was 27.2C,
with spell of hot weather continuing in February
1
February, 2017
Sydney
and Brisbane residents have just sweated through the hottest month on
record.
Sydney’s
average maximum temperature for January was 29.6C, beating the
previous mark of 29.5C recorded in 1896, the Bureau of Meteorology
said on Wednesday.
Last
month Sydney had 11 days when the temperature topped 30C and five
days above 35C, smashing not only all previous records for the month
but for any month since records began in 1858.
“Anyone
that’s been feeling really uncomfortable can feel 100% justified in
their complaints,” Bureau of Meteorology climatologist Agata
Imielska said. “It’s the warmest month for Sydney.”
January’s
average minimum was 21.6C, breaking the previous January record of
21C in 1991 and the previous average minimum for any month which had
been 21.2C in February 2010.
“Only
three days dropped below 25C as a maximum in January 2017 and that’s
the equal fewest on record with January 1994,” Imielska said.
Brisbane
also experienced its hottest January on record as temperatures
climbed almost two degrees above the monthly average.
Data
released by the Bureau of Meteorology showed Brisbane’s temperature
average maximum of 27.2C, well above the mean of 25.4C and breaking
the previous record of 27C set in 2004.
The
average minimum temperature topped 23C throughout January, breaking
the 22.8C recorded in 1973.
Logan
City and Brisbane Airport also broke records for the hottest January
since data collection in both areas began more than 20 years ago.
The
latest bureau statistics showed why so many southeast Queenslanders
struggled to sleep over the past month.
Brisbane
also recorded its equal hottest minimum daily temperature on 21
January 21. The mercury only went as low as 28C, last recorded on 29
January 1940.
Bureau
spokesman Michael Knepp warned the hot weather was set to continue
into this month. The temperature is expected to climb to 35C in
Brisbane on Thursday, with a minimum of 24C.
Imielska
said Sydney’s record-breaking temperatures were due to a
combination of strong westerly winds, unusually dry conditions, less
than average rainfall and climate change.
“One
factor is the ongoing warming trend – we’ve warmed by a degree in
the past century and it’s not just about averages, we see increases
in these extreme temperatures as well,” Imielska said.
“It
doesn’t just go for land temperatures, it also goes for ocean
temperatures. In 2016 we saw the warmest ocean temperatures on
record.”
The
persistent heat has been aggravated by dry conditions since October
caused by a high-pressure system sitting over the Tasman Sea, which
has increased westerly winds moving over southern Australia.
“We’ve
also had warm offshore sea surface temperatures – that also keeps
conditions warmer, particularly at night,” Imielska said. “As a
result we have seen that back-to-back heat and the lack of relief –
the surprising thing is that there haven’t been any really cool
days.”
Sydney
conditions are due to heat up again over the next few days with the
mercury expected to hit 37C in the city and 43C in the west on
Sunday.
Australia's
deadly relationship with heat
Phil
Mercer
BBC,
31
January, 2017
As
a homesick teenager in Britain in the early 1900s, the writer
Dorothea Mackellar yearned for the "pitiless blue sky" of
Australia.
"I
love a sunburnt country," she declared in her timeless poem My
Country, and more than a century after those famous words were
crafted, parts of Australia have endured another savage summer of
heat. Sydney has had its hottest December and January nights on
record and there have been new year heatwaves in Queensland, Victoria
and South Australia.
The
bursts of scorching conditions are not only uncomfortable, they can
be a silent killer. Doctors are worried that many Australians are
underestimating the dangers posed by the heat, the nation's deadliest
natural hazard.
Deadlier than fires
In
2009, 173 people died in the Black
Saturday bushfires in
the state of Victoria, one of the most fire-prone regions in the
world. However, more than twice as many victims lost their lives in a
heatwave that preceded the fires.
"What
we are seeing increasingly is weather that really pushes us to our
limits," Dr Tessa Kennedy from the Australian Medical
Association of New South Wales told the BBC. "Many people don't
know that heatwaves are actually more harmful to human health than
bushfires and floods."
Mackellar's
epic love of the bush was forged in sun-baked rural New South Wales
where her family owned land near Gunnedah. About 200km (124 miles) to
the north, the people of Moree have been sweltering through an
unprecedented heatwave. The temperature in the farming town that sits
atop rich black-soil plains exceeded 35C every day in January, a
record in New South Wales, beating the previous benchmark of 17
consecutive days.
Meteorologists
believe it could near another record this week - seven successive
days above 40C.
"We
are sick of it," said Katrina Humphries, the mayor of the Moree
Plains Shire Council. "Our son Robert and daughter-in-law
Jacqueline moved back to Norfolk [in England] a couple of years ago
because the heat here was so horrific.
"We
slow down a lot though the middle of the day and look forward to the
day when it cools down and we get some rain."
Who
is at risk?
It's
the very young, infirm and those over the age of 75 who are most risk
from searing temperatures.
Heat-related
illness, which can occur when body temperature exceeds 37.8C,
includes dehydration, cramps, heat exhaustion and heat stroke. The
consequences can be catastrophic, resulting in heart attacks, brain
damage and death. Finding out exactly how the heat has killed an
individual is often hard because many victims have pre-existing
medical conditions, which can be exacerbated when it is very hot.
In
early January, a Virgin Australia pilot died of dehydration and
exhaustion while quad-biking in the Beerburrum State Forest, north of
Brisbane. It was reported that 30-year old Matthew Hall's body
temperature had reached 42C, which caused his organs to shut down. He
died of critical heat stroke, two weeks before his wife was due to
give birth to their first child.
More
than 500 people die of heat stress across the nation each year,
according to the Australia Medical Association. The symptoms of heat
exhaustion include a rapid heart rate, headaches, nausea and
fainting.
As
the mercury climbs, spare a thought for those workers who have to
endure roasting conditions on roofs, building sites or fuel depots,
although they should be protected by strict health and safety laws.
"If
it is 38C you are supposed to be not working," Tony Sheldon, the
head of the Transport Workers Union, told the BBC. "There are a
number of precautions that should be taken; hydration, proper
clothing, rest periods. It is critical that people have those
opportunities to get out of the heat and they have a legal right to
do that."
Lifestyle
under threat?
Australia's
Bureau of Meteorology defines a heatwave as "three days or more
of high maximum and minimum temperatures that is unusual for that
location".
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Media
captionDr Angie Bone of Public Health England offers some tips and
dispels some myths on staying cool
Conservationists
have argued that Australia's fabled alfresco lifestyle could be in
jeopardy because more severe heat could restrict the amount of time
people can safely spend outside. Scientists, too, believe that the
world's driest inhabited continent is becoming hotter.
"There
is clear evidence that heatwaves are intensifying in Australia. The
overall trend in heatwaves is caused by global warming," said
Andy Pitman, the director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate
System, a collaboration of various universities and research
organisations.
"I
was recently in southern Sicily and no-one was out and about in the
extreme heat - activities took place in the morning and evening. One
can imagine… problems for sports that take all day [cricket, for
example]. There are also major economic risks - human productivity
drops off in the heat, so construction is already at risk.
Agriculture is threatened by extreme heat, too."
As
the latest blanket of oppressive heat and humidity smothered Sydney,
the city seemed to slip into slow-motion to cope, although there were
some die-hard runners pounding the pavements.
"Ah,
I'm not too bad, mate," said one man, his face lobster-red and
shirt dripping with sweat. "Us Aussies grew up with it, so it is
not a big deal."
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