Australia faces 'extreme' heatwave, heightening bush fire risk

The heightened fire risk, combined with El Nino conditions, raises concerns for an already high-risk fire season.

The Bureau of Meteorology had an "extreme heatwave warning" in place for the remote Pilbara and Gascoyne areas of Australia's largest state. / Photo: Reuters Archive
Reuters Archive

The Bureau of Meteorology had an "extreme heatwave warning" in place for the remote Pilbara and Gascoyne areas of Australia's largest state. / Photo: Reuters Archive

Parts of Western Australia have been gripped by an "extreme" heat wave, raising the risk of bushfires in the vast state, the nation's weather forecaster said.

The Bureau of Meteorology had an "extreme heat-wave warning" in place on Saturday for the remote Pilbara and Gascoyne areas of Australia's largest state, warning temperatures there could hit high forties degrees Celsius over the weekend.

In the Pilbara mining town of Paraburdoo, about 1,500 kilometres (930 miles) north of the state capital Perth, a maximum temperature of 47°C (116.6 degrees Fahrenheit) was forecast on Saturday, more than six degrees above the average January maximum, according to forecaster data. It was 42.7°C (108.8 F) there at 11 am (0300 GMT).

Australia's highest temperature on record of 50.7°C (123.2 F) was logged at the Pilbara's Onslow Airport on January 13, 2022.

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Wildfire emergency prompts evacuation warnings in Western Australia

Elevated fire dangers

Saturday's hot weather lifts the risk of bushfires in an already high-risk fire season amid an El Nino weather pattern, which is typically associated with extreme events such as wildfires, cyclones and droughts.

"Very hot and dry conditions combined with fresh southerly winds and a fresh to strong west to southwesterly sea breeze will lead to elevated fire dangers on Saturday," the weather forecaster said on its website, regarding part of the Pilbara.

The warning comes after hundreds of firefighters earlier this month battled an out-of-control bushfire near Perth amid soaring temperatures, prompting evacuations.

Australia's last two fire seasons have been subdued compared with the 2019-2020 "Black Summer" of bushfires that destroyed an area the size of Türkiye, killed 33 people, 3 billion animals and trillions of invertebrates.

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Australia's western state braces for heatwave, bushfire threat looms

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