Heatwave putting lives at risk
Thursday, January 29, 2009 » 06:36am
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As the mercury soars, the heatwave in Melbourne and Adelaide continues to put lives at risk.
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As the mercury soars, the heatwave in Melbourne and Adelaide continues to put lives at risk.
National parks and reserves on Adelaide's fringes will be closed as extreme heat and fire danger drag into another day.
The Department of Environment and Heritage (DEH) chose to close its parks in the Mount Lofty Ranges and Fleurieu Peninsula as Adelaide's temperature topped 45 degrees, and with the city heading for its hottest week in 100 years.
SA's chief medical officer Paddy Phillips said the elderly, babies and young children were most at risk.
The furnace-like conditions were forecast to continue until at least Sunday, likely giving the city six days in a row above 40 Celsius for the first time since 1908, after Tuesday's top of 43.2 degrees.
Wednesday's high was also closing in on the city's all-time record of 46.1 Celsius set on January 12, 1939 while a top of 44 degrees is predicted on Thursday.
Last March, Adelaide had a record long heatwave with 15 consecutive days above 35 degrees.
In a statement, a DEH spokesman said the parks would close because of the extreme fire risk.
'All vehicle entry points to parks will be closed and the public are advised not to enter any of the parks via walking trails or any other means,' the statement said.
Only the Mount Lofty Summit, Cleland Wildlife Park recreation zone, Belair National Park, and the Newland Head Conservation Park (including Waitpinga and Parsons beaches) would remain open.
DEH fire crews are on standby.
As Adelaide sweltered, conditions further north were even worse with some outback centres reporting temperatures above 50 degrees, prompting health authorities to urge all South Australians to take extreme care.
The heatwave is continuing in Victoria today with 43 degrees forecast to hit Melbourne.
Premier John Brumby says high temperatures will stretch power supplies to the limit.
Mr Brumby says there have been talks with Lifesaving Victoria to request more lifesavers to patrol popular beaches as people flock to the water at night to cool off.
Winds up to 40 kilometres an hour will create more bushfire-favourable conditions at Ballarat and near Melbourne, 100 thousand staff firefighters on standby.
The Bureau of Meteorology says that Victoria's weather will remain hot for another week with temperatures mostly above 30.
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Thought you guys would like to see what we have to put up with in Australia.
Good
weather though
Russ