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THUNDERSTORMS AND GIANT hail battered parts of Australia’s east coast after “apocalyptic” dust storms swept across drought-stricken areas, as extreme weather patterns collided in the wildfire-fatigued country.
Australia has since October been overwhelmed by an unprecedented bushfire season made worse by climate change.
Swathes of the country have burned, hundreds of millions of animals have died, more than 2,000 homes have been destroyed and at least 29 lives have been lost.
Violent hailstorms pelted the capital Canberra today, with footage showing the storm ripping branches off trees.
Emergency services were warning people there to “move cars undercover and away from trees and power lines”.
Hail damaged cars are seen parked outside the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia in Canberra. AAP / PA Images
AAP / PA Images / PA Images
The bureau of meteorology told people in the southeast of New South Wales, including Sydney, to brace for the approaching storm.
“Severe thunderstorms are likely to produce damaging, locally destructive winds, large, possibly giant hailstones and heavy rainfall that may lead to flash flooding in the warning area over the next several hours,” the bureau said.
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Two people visiting the popular tourist destination the Blue Mountains were taken to hospital when a 16-year-old boy was hit by lightning and a 24-year-old man suffered injuries while leaning on a nearby metal railing.
“These people are extremely lucky to be alive,” Ambulance New South Wales duty manager Greg Marshall said in a statement.
“One centimetre either way and they would have faced a direct hit which could’ve been fatal.”
They both remain in hospital in a stable condition.
‘Like an apocalyptic movie’
Dramatic images captured over the weekend from western New South Wales show a massive wall of dust rolling through outback towns. Locals reported being cast into darkness in the middle of the day.
“We are used to the ritual and rush of bringing in washing, turning air cons off, closing windows and doors, before a big dust storm hits,” Ashleigh Hull from the rural town of Dubbo told AFP.
This one was “more spectacular” than the typical dust storm, she added.
It was honestly like an apocalyptic movie, a huge wave coming towards us, really quite impressive, but I just wish it actually brought a good amount of rain, not dust.
The southern city of Melbourne was also lashed by huge hailstones late last night.
In Victoria, where bushfires continue to smoulder, heavy rainfall overnight was welcomed in fire grounds in the north, but authorities said it also brought with it new dangers.
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Wildfires may permanently alter Australian landscape, scientists warn
State Premier Daniel Andrews said the rain meant “much more dangerous conditions” for those operating heavy machinery to get into areas damaged by bushfires, while landslides complicated efforts to open up closed roads.
The wet weather has brought a reprieve for many fire grounds along the east coast, but authorities remain on high alert, warning that the bushfire season still has weeks to run.
Experts expect Australia to lose billions of dollars in tourism revenue as a result of the fires.
The government over the weekend announced a Aus$76 million (€47 million) recovery package to aid in the tourism recovery.
The number of travellers booking visits to Australia has fallen 10-20% since the fires began in September.
Tourism Australia was forced to suspend an upbeat advertising campaign launched in the middle of the crisis featuring pop star Kylie Minogue after the ad was met with incredulity about what many saw as poor timing.
“This is one of the biggest, if not the biggest – I would say the biggest – challenge the tourism industry has had in living memory,” Prime Minister Scott Morrison has said.
Australia’s conservative government has come under intense criticism for its response to the fires and climate change, which scientists say is a major contributing factor to the crisis.
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@SF Knee Knockers: “records are there to be broken….climate changing since planet formed.
“what part of my comment is wrong?”
You comment is wrong as it misses the fact that most new weather records are set for the highest temperatures ever, you wrongly implied that weather records are equally divided between hottest and coldest ever temperatures. The fact that most new records are for hottest temperature every helps prove the Earth is warming due to human activities.
“Australia has since October been overwhelmed by an unprecedented bushfire season MADE WORSE BY CLIMATE CHANGE”
Have you got any facts or figures to support this climate change claim??
@Alan Lynch: Extreme hot summers and forest fires in Australia are 5 times more likely now due to anthropogenic climate change (Lewis & Karoly, 2013).
“Back in 2013, we published the first quantitative attribution study on Australia’s record hot summer, finding that anthropogenic climate change made this record heat at least 5 times more likely.”
“Today, BoM released monthly climate data showing that January temperatures in many places were well above average. In NSW, average temperatures were nearly 6°C above the 1961-1990 averages.”
“I’ve gone back and looked at the study we did in 2013 and seen what’s changed in the meantime. It turns out a lot.”
“By applying this global climate model-based event attribution framework (see details below or email for further info), we see rapid changes in the way climate change is impacting extremes in Australia.”
“The extremes in January in Victoria and NSW simply do not occur in climate model simulations without greenhouse gases.”
@Alan Lynch: this is a newspaper article. It is expected to be factual and accurate, not to provide references. As you haven’t bothered to do your own research, here’s a reference from a peer reviewed journal for you. I’m sure you’ll take the time to examine it. https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1890/ES11-00189.1
@David Jordan: I’ll see your “science” from these so called “scientists” and raise you my unrelated, anecdotal story of finding frost on my car in Ireland..
how do you explain that with global “warming”???.oh I FORGOT THE OBLIGATORY RANDOM ALL CAPS.
@Alan Lynch: OK, I’ll be nice. The Garnaut climate change review 2008 predicted this “bushfire seasons would progressively “start earlier, end slightly later and generally be more intense”. The prediction was possible because of irrefutable climate change science. 11 years ago (as now), the science was fully understood. We are simply witnessing what climatologists knew all along. It’s going to get worse BTW.
@David Jordan: your facts wont even register with the OP.
It’s a fundamental aspect of the human condition that people see evidence that disagrees with their firmly-held beliefs as weaker. Ultimately, they ask themselves different questions when evaluating that evidence, depending on whether they want to believe what it suggests or not.
For desired conclusions, the question is ‘Can I believe this?’, but for unpalatable conclusions we ask, ‘Must I believe this?’” People come to some information seeking permission to believe, and to other information looking for escape routes.
Search “motivated reasoning”, “confirmation bias” and “the backfire effect”
@Paraic: NEWSFLASH…country that has always been like a furnace is still hot as hell and getting hotter..France used to be covered in ice and it all disappeared without any human cause…
@SF Knee Knockers: You’re right, it’s hot has hell and getting hotter but it wasn’t always like that. I visited in 1999 and it was a very pleasant summer. The forests weren’t ablaze, no hail the size of golf balls, no dust storms. Have you ever been?
@Alan Lynch: Climate change is a scientific fact that is not disputed by anyone. The CAUSES of climate change are what people debate, whether these are cyclical events or man made. Denying climate change is only one notch above being a flat earther.
@Sean Fahey: The causes of climate change are not being debated. It’s known to be anthropogenic. If you are debating the causes of climate change, you are also no better than a flat Earther.
I know what the problem is, I figured it out. Australia is upside down, and we all know what happens when you hold something that’s burning upside down.
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