Sydney records hottest August day in seven years amid high fire danger from warm, windy weather

<span>The sun rises over North Bondi as the BoM says Sydney’s temperatures have been ‘way above’ averages for August.</span><span>Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian</span>
The sun rises over North Bondi as the BoM says Sydney’s temperatures have been ‘way above’ averages for August.Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

Sydney has recorded its hottest August day in seven years as unusually warm and windy weather sweeps across New South Wales, triggering high fire danger.

Sydney’s temperatures shot “way up above the averages for August”, said Angus Hines, a senior meteorologist at the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM). The city’s average August temperature is 17.9C.

Reaching a high of 28.1C at lunchtime, Wednesday became the hottest August day recorded in at least the past seven years, beating last year’s 27.5C recorded on 30 August at Sydney’s official weather station. The city’s record August temperature is 31.3C, set in 1995.

Strong winds were expected around the east of NSW, with a damaging wind warning in place across the Illawarra and hitting the far west of Sydney’s metropolitan region.

Related: Australia records hottest ever winter temperature with some areas set to be 10C above average

“It is very windy, very warm, very sunny – all the things that contribute to fire danger through traditionally our late spring and summer months,” Hines said.

Fire danger ratings were set at “high” for Sydney and the Illawarra, according to the NSW Rural Fire Service. Moderate fire danger ratings were in place for most of the rest of the state.

“We are not really into the traditional fire weather season for New South Wales,” Hines said, adding that conditions were “quite unusual for this time of year”.

“Even at this time of year, having the warm and dry, windy weather can raise that risk of fires around the region,” he said.

Victoria Quested, spokesperson for the NSW Rural Fire Service, said it was a timely reminder that bush and grass fires could hit at any time of the year, even in winter.

“You need to be prepared year-round,” she said. “Fires don’t discriminate.”

She warned against hazard reduction burns, saying burns by landholders in recent days had been reigniting.

“You need to be monitoring and making sure that anything you do is fully extinguished,” she said. “The last thing that we would want is for a fire … to get away from you and to escalate and potentially threaten your own property or that of your neighbours.”

Australia is on track to record its hottest August on record, as a global heating-fuelled “heat engine” brings spring and summer warmth to Australia’s winter. The BoM forecasts 2024’s winter to be the nation’s fifth-warmest yet.

Winds were expected to ease and temperatures to drop on Thursday, knocking high fire danger ratings back down to moderate for Sydney and the Illawarra.

However, another very windy and warm day was forecast for those same areas on Friday, which could bump fire danger ratings back up, Hines said.

With reporting from Australian Associated Press

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