Generally,
I prefer reports to forecasts
Heatwave
to hit Australia after Christmas with 45 degrees in the south
Bureau
of Meteorology issues three-day heatwave warning for inland areas
across the country from Christmas Day
22
December, 2018
A
post-Christmas heatwave is set to hit Australia next week, stretching
from Broome to Melbourne, peaking at 45C in South Australia, and
bringing the heat to the Boxing Day Test.
The
Bureau of Meteorology has issued a three-day heatwave warning for
inland areas across nearly the whole country from Christmas to 28
December.
Severe
to low heatwaves will cover northern and central Western Australia,
central South Australia, northern Victoria and southern New South
Wales in the post-Christmas holiday period.
The
Melbourne Cricket Ground will hit a maximum of 32C on Boxing Day, and
parts of South Australia will rise to 45C the day after.
Adelaide
will reach a maximum of 37C on Boxing Day, 41C on Thursday and 38C on
Friday.
Meteorologist
Claire Yeo said Thursday would be the hottest day in most parts of
the country.
“Places
west of the Great Dividing Range in NSW will experience temperatures
in the mid-40s, at some locations in SA, we will potentially see
temperatures above 45C.
“Generally
anywhere in the south east, away from the coast will see those
temperatures rising. Anywhere inland is going to be very, very hot.”
Michael
Efron, another forecaster for the bureau, said a high pressure system
would begin forming over Victoria on Saturday.
On
Christmas Day – which will be warm and dry for most of the country
– Victoria would experience an afternoon breeze that would cool the
state down before dinnertime, he predicted.
But
the heat would pick up the next day.
“It
will be really hot across the state on Boxing Day: into the low 40s
in the north, and 41C in Mildura,” he said. “For the cricket at
the MCG, another sunny day, a top of 32C degrees. Do take care if you
are outside on Boxing Day.”
Sydney
will experience a maximum of 29C on Boxing Day and 30C on Thursday,
Melbourne will see 34C on Thursday, and Brisbane is forecast for a
maximum of 29C on Boxing Day and Thursday.
Yeo
said the hot spell was expected for a summer that the bureau had
already predicted would be hotter and drier than average.
In
October, the bureau said there was an 80% chance temperatures would
be higher than average this summer, in what forecaster Andrew Watkins
said were “astoundingly” high odds.
“We
have been continuously forecasting in our climate outlook that
temperatures would be above average over the period,” said Yeo.
She
added that while the rest of the country sweltered after Christmas,
northern Queensland could experience showers from the impact of
ex-tropical Cyclone Owen.
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