Green | February 06, 2009 | 12 comments

Australia braces for major heat and bushfires

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JanforGore
So to those who keep posting about the huge amounts of snow Great Britain got, or the fact that it is colder in many places than usual this winter, know this: This is what is known as climate extremes. And if you know your geography, you know that Australia on the other side of the world is now experiencing one of the hottest summers it has ever experienced. Another climate extreme. Climate extremes are a part of global warming, which includes erratic weather patterns, which includes snow, rain, and extreme cold or heat. Do not be so myopic that you lose perspective here. It would appear that the pace at which global warming/climate change is excelerating is giving us a stark warning that so many are still ignoring to our collective peril: it isn't about weather but trends, and we better start paying attention to them now.
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12 comments // Australia braces for major heat and bushfires

  • Bren589
    • 0
      Bren589  
    • I have been staying on top of this lately. My adopted father lives in Australia , am very worried about his health as he is elderly and the heat does have a bad effect on him. I seen on cnn about brush fires there this morning. Lets all hope for rain.. Peace

    • 4 years ago
  • JanforGore
  • futuregen
    • 0
      futuregen  
    • Image
    • Excerpt form article:
      SYDNEY -- Raging wildfires swept southeastern Australia on Saturday, killing at least 14 people and razing some 100 homes as scorching temperatures and gale-force winds combined into a deadly inferno.

      Victoria state police said the death toll might exceed 40 as dozens of fires burned unchecked into the night. Some officials described the day as the worst in the sunburned country's history of wildfires.

    • 4 years ago
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • Thanks for your comment. Thanks for showing once again so clearly why the skeptics (the very few left) aren't credible, and clearly deaf, dumb, and blind.

    • 4 years ago
  • Dut
  • jahbini
    • 0
      jahbini  
    • Dut:

      Got any back-up for your claims? Besides your inner convictions? You know, like trend analysis or measurements of ice coverage or sea water temperatures or ???

    • 4 years ago
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • BBC: Extreme Drought In Australia

      Embedding was disabled so you need to click on the link to go to the video.

      Australia may well have reached their tipping point.

    • 4 years ago
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • Fires rage, floodwaters rise in Australian extremes

      This is global warming up close and personal. And to think people of islands near Australia such as Tuvalu were hoping for sanctuary in Australia as sea rise swallows their homes.

    • 4 years ago
  • darkhorsejim
    • 0
      darkhorsejim  
    • This trend has been building for years. I believe Australia will become the first uninhabitable continent due to its location, our lack of understanding "the bigger picture" & our inability to develop & promote appropriate technology to wrestle with climate change on such a gargantuan scale.

      Yet, northern Oz is now faced with devastating floods after suffering through a severe drought for years. Go figure.

    • 4 years ago
  • UWAZell
    • 0
      UWAZell  
    • darkhorsejim:

      Some would say our continent-country is already uninhabitable. That said.. I reckon the US would beat us to it because you know they always have to be the first at everything. Nevertheless, this is still the best country in the world.

    • 4 years ago
  • pjacobs51
    • 0
      pjacobs51  
    • In the seventh year of a crippling drought, much of Australia is in an unprecedented water crisis. The Big Dry, as Australians have dubbed the weather, is the worst in a century and has forced water restrictions on an entire nation.

    • 4 years ago
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • From the article:

      Southeast Australia is bracing for a major heatwave which could cause the worst bushfires for decades, and nursing homes have been warned to prepare for the searing heat after several deaths during a heatwave last week.

      The temperature in the outback town of Ivanhoe in New South Wales state is forecast to reach 47 degrees Celsius (116.6 Fahrenheit) on Saturday and the coastal cities of Sydney and Melbourne will bake under 40-plus Celsius.

      Tens of thousands of firefighters are on standby to cope with bushfire outbreaks, with authorities in Victoria state warning Saturday's conditions could be worse than those that led to the deadly "Ash Wednesday" fires of 1983, which killed 75.

      "It's just going to be probably ... the worst day ever in the history of the state in terms of temperatures and winds," Victoria state premier John Brumby told reporters on Friday.

      "The state is just tinder dry, so people need to exercise real commonsense tomorrow, if you don't need to go out don't go out, it's a seriously bad day," he said.

      The heatwave will not affect commodity crops such as wheat and sugar, which are grown predominately in western and northern Australia.

      Authorities fear the heatwave, which last week caused major blackouts and left thousands of residents without air conditioning, could again be fatal to the elderly.

      There were 22 "sudden deaths" in Adelaide last Friday at the height of the last heatwave and several in Melbourne.

      "This is about protecting our nation's frail and aged," said Minister for Aging Justine Elliot, in warning nursing homes to prepare for the heatwave. Nursing homes in southeast Australia care for some 170,000 residents.

      "Aged care providers have a legal obligation to ensure that they are providing proper care for residents. It is important in heatwave conditions that they recognize residents may not be able to communicate their discomfort," Elliot said in a statement.

      South Australia's main morgue was now almost full with 71 bodies, a temporary morgue has been hired, and elective surgery delayed as hospitals try to cope with more than 600 heat-related cases, said local media.

      Rail authorities in Sydney have ordered a slowdown of the network to try and avoid accidents if rail lines buckle, as they did in last week's heatwave in Melbourne and Adelaide. Three train lines in Adelaide will be closed on Saturday.

      Emergency officials have imposed fire bans in three states, warning that arsonists would be severely dealt with.

      "The government obviously has absolutely no tolerance for arsonists," New South Wales state Emergency Services Minister Steve Whan told reporters.

    • 4 years ago
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