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Australia sweats in heatwave lifting bushfire risk to highest danger level in some states, amid El Nino

  • Heatwave alerts at “extreme” level, the highest danger rating, in place for a second day for parts of Western Australia and extended to South Australia
  • Weather forecaster warns that the remote Pilbara and Gascoyne areas in Western Australia could hit the high 40 degrees Celsius on Sunday

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A spectator cools down during a practice day at the Australian Open in Melbourne. Parts of Australia are at “extreme” or “severe” levels of danger in the heatwave. Photo: AP

Large swathes of Australia sweltered on Sunday in a heatwave, the nation’s weather forecaster said, raising bushfire risk in an already high-risk fire season amid an El Nino weather pattern.

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Heatwave alerts at “extreme” level, the highest danger rating, were in place for a second day for parts of Western Australia and were extended to South Australia, while areas of Queensland, New South Wales and the Northern Territory were under “severe” warnings, the weather forecaster said.

Burnt trees and shrubbery after a bushfire at Parkerville in Perth, Western Australia, last month. Heatwave alerts are at the highest danger rating for a second day for parts of the state on Sunday. Photo: EPA
Burnt trees and shrubbery after a bushfire at Parkerville in Perth, Western Australia, last month. Heatwave alerts are at the highest danger rating for a second day for parts of the state on Sunday. Photo: EPA

It cautioned that in Western Australia, the nation’s largest state, the remote Pilbara and Gascoyne areas could hit the high 40 degrees Celsius on Sunday.

About 1,500 kilometres north of the state capital Perth, in the Pilbara mining town of Paraburdoo, a maximum temperature of 48 degrees was forecast, more than seven degrees above the average January maximum, according to forecaster data. It was 31.1 degrees there at 6:30amlocal time.

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Australia’s highest temperature on record of 50.7 degrees was logged at the Pilbara’s Onslow Airport on January 13, 2022.

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