Australia has 5th warmest year on record

The Bureau of Meteorology has confirmed Australia experienced warmer than average temperatures in 2015.

The sun rises over the Otway Ranges in Victoria

(File: AAP) Source: AAP

It's official, Australia: 2015 was warm.

Not record-breaking warm, apart from the temperatures from October to December.

But it was warmer than average across the country, making it the fifth warmest year on record for Australia.

"The national mean temperature was 0.83C above average, with a number of notable heatwaves during the year and record-breaking temperatures from October to December," the Bureau of Meteorology's Dr Scott Power said.

The combination of the most El Nino event in nearly two decades and background warming led to very warm temperatures globally throughout 2015, and contributed to Australia's warm year, the bureau said on Wednesday.

The World Meteorological Organisation has said 2015 is almost certain to be the warmest year on record globally.

The El Nino also led to below average rainfall over much of eastern Australia.

Rainfall was well below average in southwest Western Australia, southeast South Australia, western to central Victoria, much of Tasmania and a large area of inland Queensland in 2015, the bureau's annual climate statement noted.

The year started with a wetter than average January in large parts of the country but most of 2015 was drier than average across Australia.

The bureau says Australian temperatures have warmed approximately one degree Celsius since 1950, consistent with global climate trends.


Share
2 min read
Published 6 January 2016 9:25am
Updated 6 January 2016 1:48pm
Source: AAP


Share this with family and friends