Temperatures in Sydney yesterday hit their highest levels since records began 150 years ago, after an Australian government agency warned of more frequent and intense heat waves in the future.
While a vicious cold snap has recently hit Russia and eastern Europe, and the Middle East has suffered its worst winter storm in a decade, Australian firefighters were battling scores of wildfires in stifling summer heat.
In Sydney, Australia’s biggest city, the temperature smashed the previous hottest recorded temperature, peaking at 45.8°C. The old record, of 45.3°C, was set in January 1939.
“It’s a historic day for Sydney,” Weather Channel meteorologist Dick Whitaker said. “We haven’t seen a day like this in Sydney’s recorded history.”
It is the latest record to fall as Australia swelters under a heat wave that has affected 70 percent of the vast country and created what experts have called a “dome of heat” over the nation’s outback center.
The Bureau of Meteorology said the heat wave had been affecting large parts of Australia since late last year and the Sydney record set at Observatory Hill — where the temperature has been measured since 1859 — was just the latest.
“The record temperatures were not limited to Sydney, with records being set along the coast,” the bureau said. “The highest temperature recorded in the Greater Sydney Area was 46.5°C at Penrith.”
The scorching heat follows an extended period of exceptionally widespread hot weather for Australia, in which the nation experienced its hottest day on record on Jan. 7, with the average maximum temperature hitting 40.33°C.
The extreme weather, which has exacerbated bushfires, last week also saw the government’s weather bureau upgrade its temperature scale by introducing new colors to cover projected forecast highs.
At one point last week, central Australia was shown with a purple area on the bureau’s forecast map, a new color-code suggesting temperatures were set to soar above 50°C.
Australia’s all-time record temperature is 50.7 degrees, set in January 1960 at Oodnadatta in South Australia state.
The record weather comes as police said one man died yesterday in a bushfire in Victoria, with his body found in a burnt-out car in the Seaton area in the state’s southeast.
Firefighters are battling blazes in New South Wales and Victoria, almost two weeks after a dangerous fire on the southern island state of Tasmania razed more than 100 homes.
The unprecedented heat wave prompted the government’s Climate Commission to issue a new report, Off the Charts: Extreme Australian summer heat, on the weather event last weekend.
It said climate change had contributed to making the extreme heat conditions and bushfires even worse.
Showcasing phallus-shaped portable shrines and pink penis candies, Japan’s annual fertility festival yesterday teemed with tourists, couples and families elated by its open display of sex. The spring Kanamara Matsuri near Tokyo features colorfully dressed worshipers carrying a trio of giant phallic-shaped objects as they parade through the street with glee. The festival, as legend has it, honors a local blacksmith in the Edo Period (1603-1868) who forged an iron dildo to break the teeth of a sharp-toothed demon inhabiting a woman’s vagina that had been castrating young men on their wedding nights. A 1m black steel phallus sits in the courtyard of
JAN. 1 CLAUSE: As military service is voluntary, applications for permission to stay abroad for over three months for men up to age 45 must, in principle, be granted A little-noticed clause in sweeping changes to Germany’s military service policy has triggered an uproar after it emerged that the law requires men aged up to 45 to get permission from the armed forces before any significant stay abroad, even in peacetime. The legislation, which went into effect on Jan. 1 aims to bolster the military and demands all 18-year-old men fill out a questionnaire to gauge their suitability to serve in the armed forces, but stops short of conscription. If the “modernized” model fails to pull in enough recruits, parliament will be compelled to discuss the reintroduction of compulsory service, German
Filipino farmers like Romeo Wagayan have been left with little choice but to let their vegetables rot in the field rather than sell them at a loss, as rising oil prices linked to the Iran war drive up the cost of harvesting, labor and transport. “There’s nothing we can do,” said Wagayan, a 57-year old vegetable farmer in the northern Philippine province of Benguet. “If we harvest it, our losses only increase because of labor, transportation and packing costs. We don’t earn anything from it. That’s why we decided not to harvest at all,” he said. Soaring costs caused by the Middle East
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s officially declared wealth is fairly modest: some savings and a jointly owned villa in Budapest. However, voters in what Transparency International deems the EU’s most corrupt country believe otherwise — and they might make Orban pay in a general election this Sunday that could spell an end to his 16-year rule. The wealth amassed by Orban’s inner circle is fueling the increasingly palpable frustration of a population grappling with sluggish growth, high inflation and worsening public services. “The government’s communication machine worked well as long as our economic situation remained relatively good,” said Zoltan Ranschburg, a political analyst