Australian Bushfires Link to India’s Late-Ending Monsoon Season

australia bushfires

The catastrophic bushfires in Australia, which killed three and displaced thousands, is partly due to the monsoon season ending late in India, according to an expert.

Trent Penham, who is associated with the University of Melbourne and studies the behavior and formation of bushfires using real depictions of fuel, weather, and topography, said the bushfires could be partly explained by the monsoon season ending later in India, the state-run ABC news reported on Sunday.

Australian state of New South Wales (NSW) is struggling to deal with unprecedented bushfire season this year, which till now has killed three people, displaced thousands and destroyed over 150 homes.

“The global systems are all linked … we can’t dissociate them. But … if you’re sitting in one area, it’s very hard to imagine that the weather 10,000 kilometers away is actually going to have an impact,” Penham said.

He said the record-breaking rainfalls did not end from India until mid last month.

“The record-breaking rainfalls did not end from India until mid last month while the south-west monsoon in Asia typically ends between June and September every year and those winds then leave the region and move south,” Penham said, adding that the situation had led to a delay to the big wet in Darwin and therefore left the eastern coast dry and fire-prone.

“The rain that may normally occur in these regions at this time hasn’t actually come down due to that global event. And so because of that, these regions are hot, dry and windy. These are the perfect conditions for extreme fires like what we’re seeing at the moment,” Penham said.

Due to the bushfires, over 850,000 hectares of land in NSW have been destroyed since the start of the bushfire season this year, with authorities asking people to plan now and avoid bushfire-prone areas.

A state of emergency was declared on Monday, with authorities describing the crisis as “some of the most devastating bushfires we have ever seen”.

Read rest at Economic Times of India


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Comments (2)

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    Andy Rowlands

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    I’m led to believe a major reason for bushfires, apart from the obvious arson, is that firebreaks are not being maintained, and dead wood is not being removed.

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  • Avatar

    Doug Harrison

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    “850,000 hectares of land in NSW have been destroyed” Destroyed they are not. Theses fires have occurred uncountable times over at last the past 50,000 years. The plant life that covers this area has evolved to recover very quickly from such events and will do so again when it rains. Too many people are moving to bush areas to escape the pressure of living in cities. They have no idea of the ecological history of their bolt hole and the danger of living in eucalyptus forests in hot weather when the very air becomes flammable as eucalyptus oil is evaporated into the atmosphere.
    I do feel sorry for the loss of life and property but there does seem to be an unwillingness to learn from these disasters. The Aboriginal people had it all worked out; they were nomadic and didn’t hang around when such conditions I describe occurred.

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