Heat Wave Adds to Australian Bushfire Threat

Dec. 28, 2019
Extreme conditions, including temperatures reaching 113 degrees Fahrenheit, is creating extreme conditions where 70 major fires have devastated Australia.

SYDNEY — Australia is in the grip of another heat wave with temperatures forecast to soar over the weekend, exacerbating deadly wildfires that have ravaged the nation for months.

Severe heat will spread across the southeast of the country over the next few days, building to “extreme” conditions in some areas, according to the Bureau of Meteorology. Parts of western Sydney are expected to reach 45 degrees Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit) by New Year’s Eve.

The intense weather could worsen blazes that have already burnt out more than 6 million acres of forest and bush land — and area larger than New Jersey — since the wildfire season began unusually early in winter amid widespread drought. Nine people have been killed and more than 950 properties destroyed, triggering a debate about the impact of global warming in the world’s driest-inhabited continent.

The crisis has turned the spotlight on Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s conservative government, which champions the coal industry and has dismissed calls to take more steps to curb emissions. Morrison cut short a pre-Christmas family holiday to Hawaii amid a public backlash against the unannounced trip.

Australia’s New South Wales state, the most populous, has borne the brunt of the fires. A giant blaze northwest of Sydney, known as the Gospers Mountain fire, has destroyed more than 1.2 million acres — an area about seven times the size of Singapore.

Another massive blaze, the Currowan fire, has played havoc with holidaymakers along the coast south of Sydney, threatening tourist towns and forcing authorities to intermittently close the main highway. The fire stretches about 60 miles from Nowra to the resort town of Batemans Bay and has destroyed about 530,000 acres.

About 1,300 firefighters are in the field across the state, battling about 70 blazes, according to the Rural Fire Service.

The states of Queensland, Victoria, Western Australia and South Australia have also been hit, stretching the resources of fire services, which are mainly staffed by unpaid volunteers. The bushfires have already pumped out more than half of the country’s annual carbon dioxide emissions, and left cities including Sydney and Canberra frequently shrouded in a toxic haze of smoke.

With temperatures forecast to reach 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) in Adelaide on Monday, the state government in South Australia has declared a “code red” under which authorities will provide additional support, including food and shelter, to vulnerable homeless people.

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©2019 Bloomberg News

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