Weather merry-go-round poses new risks for Australia

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A hailstone outside the Parliament House in Canberra after a storm, in this handout photo taken on Monday. Photo: AFP stricken areas, as extreme weather patterns collided in the bushfire-fatigued country. (Photo by Handout / Courtesy of Don Arthur / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / Courtesy of Don Arthur" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS --- NO ARCHIVE ---

SYDNEY: A “merry-go-round” of extreme weather was hampering efforts by firefighters in Australia to tackle unprecedented bushfires that have killed at least 29 people and devastated vast swathes of the country.

Parts of the country welcomed heavy rainfall overnight, but authorities warned yesterday that storms were bringing added complications, and the fire-danger risk could be elevated in the coming days.

“It has been a merry-go-round of weather over the last few days,” the Bureau of Meteorology’s Kevin Parkin said.

“We have gone from fires and storms and floods, and giant hail — the size of limes…producing widespread damage — to fire danger escalating on our doorstep,” the senior meteorologist added.

A hailstone outside the Parliament House in Canberra after a storm, in this handout photo taken on Monday. Photo: AFP

The country has suffered a collision of extreme climate events in the past week, with storms, lightning, thunder and hail battering areas in the fire-hit east.

The bushfire season has been made worse by climate change, experts say.

Victoria state experienced bursts of intense rain over the past 48 hours that helped to contain long-running blazes in some areas, but landslides, fallen trees and lightning strikes have hampered recovery efforts.

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The temperature in Victoria is set to climb into the mid-30 degrees Celsius range today amid fierce winds, prompting extreme weather warnings in the western parts of the state, where authorities say “new start” fires will be difficult to contain.

“New starts in unprepared communities are the biggest risk,” Victoria Country Fire Authority chief officer Steve Warrington told media.

“If communities are not prepared for fire — whether they live or die, whether their property is saved or not saved — is very much dependent on decisions people make right now.” A change is expected to bring more rain to the state late today. – AFP

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