Cooler weather brings fire respite

Wed, Jan 9, 2013, 00:00

   

Record temperatures across southern Australia cooled today, reducing the danger from scores of raging wildfires but likely bringing only a brief reprieve from the summer’s extreme heat and fire risk.

Australia had its hottest day on record with a nationwide average of 40.33 degrees, narrowly breaking a 1972 record of 40.17 degrees.

Yesterday was the third hottest day at 40.11 degrees. Four of Australia’s hottest 10 days on record have been in 2013.

“There’s little doubt that this is a very, very extreme heat wave event,” Bureau of Meteorology manager of climate monitoring and prediction David Jones said.

“If you look at its extent, its duration, its intensity, it is arguably the most significant in Australia’s history,” he added.

With today’s cool-down in southern Australia, the national capital, Canberra, dropped from a high of 36  to 28 degrees and Sydney dropped from 43 to 23 degrees.

Mr Jones expected that today would also rank among Australia’s hottest days when the national temperatures are calculated. That is because the extreme heat has shifted from the heavier populated south to northern and central Australia.

The bureau forecast above average temperatures for the remainder of summer, compounding the fire danger created by a lack of rain across central and southern Australia over the past six months. “It is going to be very challenging,” Mr Jones said of the wildfire danger.