[Published: Tuesday September 19 2017]
Australia's warmest winter 'driven by climate change'
Canberra 19 Sep (ANA) - Climate change has driven Australia to its warmest winter on record, a leading climate group has said. Data released this month showed average maximum temperatures in the winter months of June to August were nearly 2C above average. Climate change made the "exceptionally warm and dry" winter 60 times more likely, the Climate Council said in a report. The group has linked the record hot winter to "worsening climate change". The Climate Council is an independent, non-profit organisation that was set up in 2013 to continue the work of its government-funded predecessor, which was abolished by the Tony Abbott government. According to its report released on Tuesday - Hot and Dry: Australia's Weird Winter - winter warm spells are lasting longer, occurring more frequently and becoming more intense. More than 260 heat and low rainfall records around Australia were broken this winter, the report said. It said climate change and the burning of fossil fuels had driven Australia's average winter temperature up by about 1C since 1910. That figure was reported by the CSIRO, the nation's scientific research body, last year. "It is expected that the chance of warm winters like 2017 occurring will continue to increase as global temperatures rise," the report added. The council has called for greater action to reduce Australia's fossil fuel emissions.(ANA)
FA/ANA/19 September 2017------
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