Bushfires have been ravaging Australia, with more than 50 burning throughout New South Wales, destroying homes and resulting in at least one death. Nine blazes remained out of control on Monday as flames ripped through homes and critical infrastructure. Scorching temperatures – peaking at 41C in Koolewong – combined with fierce, erratic winds to spread the fires rapidly and made them harder to control.
On Sunday night an Australian firefighter was killed after a tree fell on him while he worked on a fireground near Bulahdelah, about 150 miles (250km) north of Sydney. The blaze scorched 3,500 hectares (8,600 acres) and destroyed four homes over the weekend. NSW, one of the nation’s most fire-prone regions, is particularly vulnerable because of its hot, dry climate and vast eucalyptus forests, which shed oils that become highly flammable.
Further south, Tasmania faced its own emergency, with a fast-moving 700-hectare fire at Dolphin Sands causing destruction to 19 homes and damaging at least 40 more, leaving coastal communities reeling.
Authorities warn the heightened bushfire threat is being fuelled by rising temperatures and a dangerous build-up of vegetation. Previous years of La Niña weather systems delivered unusually wet summers, triggering dense growth across forests and grasslands. However, recent months of below-average rainfall have rapidly dried that vegetation, turning it into abundant, volatile fuel. With the season already labelled as “high risk”, many fear this could be Australia’s most dangerous summer since the “black summer” fires of 2019-20.
Meanwhile, the US state of Washington is bracing for dangerous flooding as an atmospheric river continues to drench the Pacific north-west. Authorities issued immediate evacuation orders for about 100,000 residents on Thursday as relentless rain pummels the region for another day. In just 24 hours, north-west Washington has been hit with 120-205mm of rainfall, with flooding from the Cascade Foothills to Puget Sound expected to worsen through Friday. Rivers across the state are surging towards their most severe flood classifications, with several threatening to break historic records. The Skagit River, one of Washington’s largest, is forecast to crest 6ft above its previous peak.
Elsewhere in the US, hurricane-force winds topping 80mph left thousands without power in Alaska’s Matanuska-Susitna borough over the weekend, closing schools and businesses and damaging homes. The strong gusts were driven by a clash of weather systems; a cold, dense high-pressure mass over the Copper River basin collided with a warmer low-pressure system moving in from the Gulf of Alaska. The contrast created a siphon-like effect, funnelling frigid air down the mountain valleys and accelerating it into what is known as a katabatic wind.
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