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Australia Earth

Australia's Hottest Summer Beats Previous Record by 'Large Margin' (brisbanetimes.com.au) 129

As Australia welcomes the first day of autumn with a sigh of relief, the summer statistics have arrived from the Bureau of Meteorology confirming suspicions that the country just sweated through it's hottest-ever summer. From a report: The national mean temperature for summer smashed the 1961-1990 average by a whopping 2.14C, almost a full degree above the previous hottest summer on record (2012-2013), which was 1.28 degrees above the old average. The mean maximum temperature also beat the 2012-2013 mean maximum by a similar margin (2.61 degrees above average compared to 1.64 degrees above). "It was exceptionally warm across most of the country," the weather bureau's summary states, with NSW, Victoria, Western Australia and the Northern Territory all recording their hottest-ever summer as severe and lengthy heatwaves spread across much of the country in December and January.
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Australia's Hottest Summer Beats Previous Record by 'Large Margin'

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  • by slashmydots ( 2189826 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @02:21PM (#58200408)
    I have a tried and true Australian strategy for counteracting this. Put a tax on the temperature.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      I have a tried and true Australian strategy for counteracting this. Put a tax on the temperature.

      Noo, that is too 'socialist'. Let the market deal with this and we all be fine.

  • I haven't seen any reports of a repeat of the South Australian Blackout of 2016. [wikipedia.org] I guess there has been some sort of technological improvement since then.
    • That was a freak event though. Strong winds push over a long power line, the other one had trouble coping, then power generators started tripping off.

      And now have a grid connected battery that can react faster than we can measure. So if something similar happened again, the generators might be able to stay on.

    • > I haven't seen any reports of a repeat of the South Australian Blackout of 2016. [wikipedia.org] I guess there has been some sort of technological improvement since then.

      CL above states "strong winds" - guess you'd call a tornado that as that's what happened - 26 transmission towers went down if I remember. Typically what causes problems are all the air-cons switching on in the arvo, happened down in Victoria the other day.

      Predicted top of 41degC here today, apparently the hottest week (this last
  • Some sort of Australian Seasons Savings? On my calendar the equinox is March 20.

  • In New Zealand it has felt like a very short and not-so-hot summer. For the past week, late-summer temperatures have been as low as 5 degrees in the morning and topping out at a not-so-flash 19 degrees around here (we're talking Celcius for you 'mericans) during the day.

    Even today, there's a cold Southerly and I went back to wearing jeans (instead of shorts and a teeshirt) well before the end of February whereas in years-past, it's been safe to keep wearing my summer gear through to near the end of March.

    O

  • Then I guess we'd better get hot ... no pun intended ... on some technological solutions.

    (Perhaps the saltwater cloud guy from earlier today.)

    Hand wringing, scolding, and name calling don't seem to be doing the trick.

    • Then I guess we'd better get hot ... no pun intended ... on some technological solutions.

      (Perhaps the saltwater cloud guy from earlier today.)

      Hand wringing, scolding, and name calling don't seem to be doing the trick.

      Not to mention nuclear.

      • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

        Not to mention nuclear.

        It would seem there is an abundance of solar energy that can be utilised.

  • ... that the first day of Autumn offered no relief. It was 38degC in the Victorian Central Highlands where I live and looks like being not much cooler than that today.

  • Hot! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by spaceyhackerlady ( 462530 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @05:24PM (#58201688)

    A YouTuber I follow is at the Avalon Airshow [airshow.com.au], just south of Melbourne. Not only is it pushing 40, it's windy, that hair-dryer hot wind that makes 40-ish temperatures even worse. In the meantime we've just had the coldest February ever here in Vancouver.

    ...laura

All life evolves by the differential survival of replicating entities. -- Dawkins

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