Calls for immediate and ambitious action to tackle the climate emergency piled up Thursday in response to preliminary analysis from Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology that Wednesday smashed the nation’s temperature record by a full 1°C just one day after the previous all-time record.
The first record was set Tuesday, when Australia’s national average maximum temperature reached 40.9°C (105.6°F), eliciting alarm from climate and fire safety experts. Wednesday, the average rose to 41.9°C (107.4°F), sparking a fresh wave of warnings and demands for bold efforts to battle the planetary crisis.
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“On Wednesday, Australia’s heatwave reached incredible proportions,” tweeted Kees van der Leun, a director at the American consultancy firm Navigant who works with energy sector clients in Europe and the Middle East.
“I think this is the single loudest alarm bell I’ve ever heard on global heating,” added van der Leun. “Red lights flashing all over. Politicians not taking this as a call for climate action will probably never act at all.”
Amid the mounting alarm, meteorologists warned Thursday that the record-smashing heat in Australia is set to continue. The Sydney Morning Herald reported that “the national temperature record could be broken for the third day in a row when it is analyzed on Friday.”
New South Wales—which is Australia’s most populous state and home to Sydney, the country’s largest city—has been battling high temperatures and devastating bushfires for the past few months.
“While other parts of the country will cool down, NSW is bracing for deteriorating conditions on the weekend,” according to the Herald. Saturday, the temperature could soar to 47°C (116.6°F) in Western Sydney.
Alongside higher temperatures in the coming days, Neil Bennett of the government’s meteorology bureau told the newspaper, “the other thing that’s similar to today is that there will be a southerly change during the day. So once again the fires will be impacted, and that’s just going to exacerbate problems.”
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