Australia’s south-east sweats through heatwave, facing bushfire risk

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Fire crew battles bushfires at Halls Gap in the Grampians region of Victoria in Melbourne, Australia, on Dec 27, 2024.

Fire crew battles bushfires at Halls Gap in the Grampians region of Victoria in Melbourne, Australia, on Dec 27, 2024.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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MELBOURNE – Australia's south-east on Jan 4 sweltered in a heatwave that raised the risk of bushfires and led the authorities to issue fire bans for large parts of Victoria state.

Australia faces a high-risk bushfire season that has already seen the Victorian authorities battle a large fire that last week ripped through the state's vast Grampians National Park, razing homes and farmland.

The nation's weather forecaster said temperatures would be up to 14 deg C above average in some areas on Jan 4, with Melbourne, the capital of Australia's second most populous state Victoria, set to hit 37 deg C.

At Melbourne Airport, the temperature was already 32.8 deg C at 10.20am (7.20am Singapore time), more than six degrees above the January mean maximum temperature, according to forecaster data.

Total fire bans were in place for two districts in Victoria's west, including Wimmera, an area stretching more than 180km, where the authorities labelled the fire danger as "extreme", the highest danger rating.

"The more significant wind change that is driving the heat across the southeast is not due until the night of Jan 5," Bureau of Meteorology official Miriam Bradbury told Australian Broadcasting Corp television.

The country's last few fire seasons have been quiet compared with the catastrophic 2019-2020 "Black Summer" of wildfires that destroyed an area the size of Turkey and killed 33 people. REUTERS

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