1 Dec 2014

Sydney sizzles in sweltering spring

6:59 pm on 1 December 2014

Australia has had its hottest spring and second-hottest November on record in what the Bureau of Meteorology says is the latest in a long line of hot springs.

Sydneysiders flocked to Bondi Beach in late September as the hottest spring on record kicked in.

Sydneysiders flocked to Bondi Beach in late September as the hottest spring on record kicked in. Photo: AFP

Bureau of Meteorology climate monitoring manager Karl Braganza said 2014 had had the latest in a long line of hot springs in the past decade, AAP reported.

"Really, it was only 2010 that had a cool spring in the past 10 years or so. Nine out of the warmest springs on record have occurred since 2002," Dr Braganza said.

Australia's average seasonal temperature is derived by averaging the temperature data from weather stations, where records go back to 1910.

The figure is then compared with the long-term average temperature, which measures the period from 1961 to 1990.

Spring 2014's average temperature of 24degC exceeded the mean by 1.5degC, Dr Braganza said.

"That departure, averaged over a whole three-month period, is actually really large. That means it was, on average, over 1.5C warmer, and that's the largest seasonal departure that we've ever recorded," he said.

Heatwaves in New South Wales and Queensland were major factors in the result, Dr Braganza said.

The bureau was still finalising its figures but he said mean temperatures in November were the second-hottest on record.

"This is similar to what we've seen in the past couple of years, when these high summer temperatures started to get going late in spring or early in December, which is about a month earlier than typical," Dr Braganza said.

Low rainfall was linked to warmer-than-average temperatures in Australia and around the world, he said.

"Rainfall on the soil acts like an evaporative cooler over the continent," Dr Braganza said.

"Drought has been quite persistent in Queensland, stretching over the border to South Australia and New South Wales, and now in western Victoria and south-eastern South Australia, you've got re-emerging drought conditions as well.

"So, when you look at that, you're not so surprised that you'll get record temperatures for spring as well."

Australia has had its hottest spring and second-hottest November on record, partly because of heatwaves in New South Wales and Queensland .

This spring's average temperature of 24 degrees Celsius is one-and-a-half degrees warmer than the average over the past 30 years.

A climate scientist, Karl Braganza, says nine of the country's warmest springs have been recorded since 2002.

Drought has persisted in Queensland and has also hit adjacent areas of South Australia and New South Wales.

As well, drought conditions are now re-emerging in in western Victoria and south-eastern South Australia.

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