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'Unprecedented': Australia Just Recorded Its Hottest Month on Record in January
'Unprecedented': Australia Just Recorded Its Hottest Month on Record in January
Jan 17, 2024 3:45 PM

At a Glance

Australia's scorching start to 2019 has been confirmed as the country's hottest month on record.January was Australia's first month on record with a mean temperature in excess of 86 degrees.The record comes on the heels of the country's third-hottest year on record in 2018.

As the Midwestern U.S. shivers in the coldest Arctic air the region has seen in decades, Australia just sweat through its hottest month on record and saw wildfires continually scorch the drought-stricken south and floods soak the tropical north in January.

According to Australia's Bureau of Meteorology, the country's start to 2019 was confirmed as the hottest on record with a mean temperature in excess of 86 degrees for the first time.

Australia's blistering January came on the heels of the country's third-hottest year on record, 2018, which came to a close with the hottest December on record. Only 2005 and 2013 were warmer years on record.

(MORE: Extreme Cold Blamed for Deaths in Midwest, Northeast; Frostbite Injuries Adding Up in Chicago)

Heat-stressed bats dropped dead from trees by the thousands in Victoria state and bitumen roads melted in New South Wales during heatwaves last month.

New South Wales officials say drought-breaking rains are needed to improve the water quality in a stretch of a major river system where hundreds of thousands of fish died in two mass deaths during January linked to excessive heat. A South Australia state government report on Thursday found that too much water had been drained from the river system for farming under a management plan that did not take into account the impact of climate change on the river’s health.

The South Australian capital Adelaide on Jan. 24 recorded the hottest day ever for a major Australian city — a searing 115.9 degrees.

On the same day, the South Australian town of Port Augusta, population 15,000, hit 121.1 degrees — the highest maximum anywhere in Australia last month.

Bureau senior climatologist Andrew Watkins described January’s heat as unprecedented.

“We saw heatwave conditions affect large parts of the country through most of the month, with records broken for both duration and also individual daily extremes,” Watkins said in a statement.

The main contributor to the heat was a persistent high-pressure system over the Tasman Sea between Australia and New Zealand that blocked cold fronts from reaching southern Australia.

Rainfall was below-average for most of the country, but the monsoonal trough has brought flooding rains to northern Queensland state in the past week, leading to a disaster declaration around the city of Townsville.

Queensland’s flooded Daintree River reached a 118-year high this week.

Emergency services reported rescuing 28 people from floodwaters in the past week.

“The vast bulk of the population will not have experienced this type of event in their lifetime,” State Disaster Coordinator Bob Gee told reporters, referring to the extraordinary flooding.

(MORE: Massive Cavity Discovered Beneath Antarctic Glacier)

Townsville Mayor Jenny Hill described the torrential rain as a “one-in-100-year event” that had forced authorities to release water from the city dam. The water release would worsen flooding in low-lying suburbs, but would prevent the Ross River from breaking its banks.

In the southern island state of Tasmania, authorities are hoping rain will douse more than 40 fires that have razed more than 720 square miles of forest and farmland by Friday. Dozens of houses have been destroyed by fires and flooding in recent weeks.

Milder weather since Thursday has lowered the fire danger but it was forecast to escalate again from Sunday.

The Climate Council, an Australian independent organization formed to provide authoritative climate change information to the public, said the January heat record showed the government needed to curb Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions which have increased during each of the past four years.

“Climate change is cranking up the intensity of extreme heat, and January’s record-breaking month is part of a sharp, long-term upswing in temperatures driven primarily from the burning of fossil fuels,” the council’s acting chief executive Martin Rice said in a statement.

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