Australia hit by bushfires in extreme heat

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Emergency services are warning people in Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia that more extreme weather is on the way.

Australia’s bushfire season is well under way, with fires raging in two states as temperatures are recorded as high as 46C.

Firefighters are struggling to control a grass fire near Moyston in Victoria, which has already burnt more than 4,714 hectares.

The state’s County Fire Authority (CFA) said 76 fire appliances were at the scene but that there have been no reports of lives or homes lost.

They advised residents to leave the town, as the region faces more extreme weather in the coming days.

More than a dozen other fires have broken out across Victoria but authorities said there were none threatening life or property at this stage.

According to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, Friday 2 January was the hottest day of the summer for the state, with Melbourne reaching 37C.

The city’s overnight temperature was expected to stay above 30C until well after midnight, forecaster Scott Williams told The Age newspaper.

In South Australia two fires were burning out of control – one in Kersbrook, north east of Adelaide, which has destroyed two homes, and another in the state’s south east.

Temperatures in South Australia have soared past 40C, with Adelaide reaching 44.1C around 4.20pm on Friday and the town of Ceduna passing 46C.

Australia often suffers from bushfires at this time of year, with the most well-known being the Black Saturday fires of February 2009 in Victoria, where 173 people were killed and around 2,000 homes destroyed and more than 7,000 left homeless.

Towns were gutted and some, such as Marysville, were completely ruined.

source:  sky.com

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