And…the article is already outdated. As of 3:10pm ACDT, Port Augusta in SA has now made it up to 50.0ºC so far today, with the slight potential to keep creeping a little higher, making it the second day in a row to crack the 50ºC barrier.
These two days are now the first official 50ºC+ days in Australia since 2022, and only the 8th and 9th times respectively that 50ºC or above has been officially recorded in Australian history.
I read a pretty sobering statistic the other day:
* Between 1957 and 2007, there were only 9 years when somewhere in Australia officially reached 49ºC or above.
* Between 2008 and 2026, 14 of those 19 years have recorded a temperature of at least 49ºC.
Additionally to that stat, this week’s heatwave has now brought five straight days over 49ºC so far.
We’ve seen daily maximums of: 49.5ºC at Ceduna, SA on Monday, 49.7ºC at Pooncarie, NSW on Tuesday, 49.2º at Borrona Downs, NSW on Wednesday, 50.0ºC at Andamooka, SA on Thursday and now the 50.0ºC that Port Augusta, SA has peaked at so far today, Friday.
Warm_Championship726 on
Okay, yeah… 50C is ridiculously hot!
Electrical_Echo_29 on
In 4 years? How is this even news.
terminalxposure on
My hot water heater is set to a 50C and that feels scalding
meeowth on
Brace yourself, people who say this is normal Australian weather and not a heat wave are coming.
Because their verandah thermometer in the sun once recorded 50c back in 1976, therefore its not a big deal
Spaceninjawithlasers on
Yes, but how hot is my crotch !!!!?
Electronic_Star_7575 on
Why do climate change denialists still exist. There’s records being broken every year consistently. I hate stupid people.
Apprehensive_Bid_329 on
Australia really needs to put more money into climate adaptation, there’s no doubt that the climate will get hotter over time, and new records are constantly being broken. We need better insulations, more robust energy grid, and more solar uptake to adapt to the future climate.
jantoxdetox on
50C, halfway through boiling point.
This feels like that Terminator scene where the nuke detonated and people disintegrated
thedeparturelounge on
Renmark airport was recorded at 49.6 tuesday, but the two digital weather displays in town recorded 50.
BinaryPill on
I think an overlooked part of this is that we are currently in a La Nina event, which is not what’s typically associated with record breaking heat in Australia. Not boding well for the next El Nino (not a climatologist, I could have oversimplified misconceptions).
EImoMan on
I was at the AO on Tuesday as Melbourne tagged 45’c and the air was spicy like it felt like the atmosphere was trying to kill me
living_on_a_tab on
When I worked in the oilfields out in the outback. During summer time it was not unusual for it to be 50+ degrees for a week straight. It was really remote so no weather station to official record it I guess. We even saw it hit 60 degrees some days.
Absurdwonder on
Funny how houses are still wofely under equipped to deal with our “regular” summers, let alone this intense heat.
ChilliTheDog631 on
Omg! Sending the nice cool breeze in CQ down to you guys!! Holy!
Articulated_Lorry on
I appreciate the section in this article that goes into what a Stevenson screen is and why it’s used, and from that, why it might feel hotter (and other thermometers register hotter) than the official temperatures.
But in practice, that means that we have a big heat problem. Mobile phones and electronics often have maximum operating temps as low as 35°. Which means that in an emergency in the heat, you can’t rely on your communication device.
Some aircons have highest outside operating temperatures as low as 40°. You can’t rely on an aircon to keep your house (and you, your pets and your family) cool.
Food producing plants will suffer. Seeds can fail to germinate, flower set and fruits can abort (tomatoes, cucumbers etc) and pollinating insects will hide from the heat (assuming they survive it). The more days over 35° we have, over 40°, over 45° and so on, the more our food production will be affected.
Water use goes up im the heat, as people try to keep themselves and their houses cool, and their gardens alive.
And the hotter it gets, the more the things we do to keep our neighbourhoods cool will fail and the situation will get worse – tree branches fall and trees die, losing shade around roads and paved areas and increasing urban heat. More aircons operating will create more heat. Walking, cycling etc will be off the cards as modes of active travel, so more people will be in vehicles, again creating more direct heat and more vehicle exhaust adding to the problem.
Jealous-Hedgehog-734 on
Scorching, dangerously hot in fact.
I wonder if there is some way for places like Port Augusta to utilise the heat and solar radiation to economic and environmental advantage, like solar desalination.
schplade on
Not doubting climate change, it’s definitely getting hotter.
But can anyone comment on the accuracy of temperature statistics back from the 1960s in regional Australia, before we had digital recording etc.
phatboyart on
I’m sure a week from now we’ll be hit with some freak ice storm. I can’t keep track nowadays.
TheSmegger on
I’ve been in 56c and I’m telling you, it’s disgusting. You don’t want to experience that shit.
Environmental_Ad3877 on
ELI5: I live in south west Sydney and I seem to be surrounded by people that have home weather stations that are online. We had 50+ last year – multiple stations recorded it so I don’t think it’s an error – but the tempo reading for the area doesn’t seem to count. The major city near us is always on the news weather maps and it was a few degrees under 50 that same day.
How is the ‘official’ (I guess, for want of a better phrase) weather recording location decided?
Particular-Report-13 on
On a positive note, the purple that weatherzone uses to display temps over 45 on its app is quite pleasing on the eye.
22 Comments
And…the article is already outdated. As of 3:10pm ACDT, Port Augusta in SA has now made it up to 50.0ºC so far today, with the slight potential to keep creeping a little higher, making it the second day in a row to crack the 50ºC barrier.
These two days are now the first official 50ºC+ days in Australia since 2022, and only the 8th and 9th times respectively that 50ºC or above has been officially recorded in Australian history.
I read a pretty sobering statistic the other day:
* Between 1957 and 2007, there were only 9 years when somewhere in Australia officially reached 49ºC or above.
* Between 2008 and 2026, 14 of those 19 years have recorded a temperature of at least 49ºC.
Additionally to that stat, this week’s heatwave has now brought five straight days over 49ºC so far.
We’ve seen daily maximums of: 49.5ºC at Ceduna, SA on Monday, 49.7ºC at Pooncarie, NSW on Tuesday, 49.2º at Borrona Downs, NSW on Wednesday, 50.0ºC at Andamooka, SA on Thursday and now the 50.0ºC that Port Augusta, SA has peaked at so far today, Friday.
Okay, yeah… 50C is ridiculously hot!
In 4 years? How is this even news.
My hot water heater is set to a 50C and that feels scalding
Brace yourself, people who say this is normal Australian weather and not a heat wave are coming.
Because their verandah thermometer in the sun once recorded 50c back in 1976, therefore its not a big deal
Yes, but how hot is my crotch !!!!?
Why do climate change denialists still exist. There’s records being broken every year consistently. I hate stupid people.
Australia really needs to put more money into climate adaptation, there’s no doubt that the climate will get hotter over time, and new records are constantly being broken. We need better insulations, more robust energy grid, and more solar uptake to adapt to the future climate.
50C, halfway through boiling point.
This feels like that Terminator scene where the nuke detonated and people disintegrated
Renmark airport was recorded at 49.6 tuesday, but the two digital weather displays in town recorded 50.
I think an overlooked part of this is that we are currently in a La Nina event, which is not what’s typically associated with record breaking heat in Australia. Not boding well for the next El Nino (not a climatologist, I could have oversimplified misconceptions).
I was at the AO on Tuesday as Melbourne tagged 45’c and the air was spicy like it felt like the atmosphere was trying to kill me
When I worked in the oilfields out in the outback. During summer time it was not unusual for it to be 50+ degrees for a week straight. It was really remote so no weather station to official record it I guess. We even saw it hit 60 degrees some days.
Funny how houses are still wofely under equipped to deal with our “regular” summers, let alone this intense heat.
Omg! Sending the nice cool breeze in CQ down to you guys!! Holy!
I appreciate the section in this article that goes into what a Stevenson screen is and why it’s used, and from that, why it might feel hotter (and other thermometers register hotter) than the official temperatures.
But in practice, that means that we have a big heat problem. Mobile phones and electronics often have maximum operating temps as low as 35°. Which means that in an emergency in the heat, you can’t rely on your communication device.
Some aircons have highest outside operating temperatures as low as 40°. You can’t rely on an aircon to keep your house (and you, your pets and your family) cool.
Food producing plants will suffer. Seeds can fail to germinate, flower set and fruits can abort (tomatoes, cucumbers etc) and pollinating insects will hide from the heat (assuming they survive it). The more days over 35° we have, over 40°, over 45° and so on, the more our food production will be affected.
Water use goes up im the heat, as people try to keep themselves and their houses cool, and their gardens alive.
And the hotter it gets, the more the things we do to keep our neighbourhoods cool will fail and the situation will get worse – tree branches fall and trees die, losing shade around roads and paved areas and increasing urban heat. More aircons operating will create more heat. Walking, cycling etc will be off the cards as modes of active travel, so more people will be in vehicles, again creating more direct heat and more vehicle exhaust adding to the problem.
Scorching, dangerously hot in fact.
I wonder if there is some way for places like Port Augusta to utilise the heat and solar radiation to economic and environmental advantage, like solar desalination.
Not doubting climate change, it’s definitely getting hotter.
But can anyone comment on the accuracy of temperature statistics back from the 1960s in regional Australia, before we had digital recording etc.
I’m sure a week from now we’ll be hit with some freak ice storm. I can’t keep track nowadays.
I’ve been in 56c and I’m telling you, it’s disgusting. You don’t want to experience that shit.
ELI5: I live in south west Sydney and I seem to be surrounded by people that have home weather stations that are online. We had 50+ last year – multiple stations recorded it so I don’t think it’s an error – but the tempo reading for the area doesn’t seem to count. The major city near us is always on the news weather maps and it was a few degrees under 50 that same day.
How is the ‘official’ (I guess, for want of a better phrase) weather recording location decided?
On a positive note, the purple that weatherzone uses to display temps over 45 on its app is quite pleasing on the eye.