Sydney's Penrith the hottest place on Earth amid devastating bushfires

The mercury has climbed to a record 48.9C in the outer western Sydney suburb of Penrith.

Penrith was the hottest place on Earth on Saturday, reaching a high of 48.9C.

Penrith was the hottest place on Earth on Saturday, reaching a high of 48.9C. Source: BSCH

The western Sydney suburb of Penrith was the hottest place on Earth on Saturday, reaching a high of 48.9 degrees Celsius.

The highest-ever temperature for the area, recorded by the Bureau of Meteorology just after 3pm, smashed a record that had stood for 80 years.

At the same time, world temperature map website showed Penrith was the hottest place in the world.

Three hours later, at 6pm, the website showed the places with the top ten highest temperatures recorded globally over the previous 24 hours were all in Australia.
A screenshot taken Saturday 4 January at 6pm AEST showing soaring temperatures in Australia.
A screenshot taken Saturday 4 January at 6pm AEST showing soaring temperatures in Australia. Source: World Weather Today
Penrith’s temperature also set a new record for the Sydney basin, beating the previous mark of 47.8 degrees in Richmond in 1939.

Canberra also broke records as the mercury climbed to 43.6 degrees on Saturday afternoon.
The previous Canberra record was 42.8 degrees at the now-closed Acton observation site in 1939.

ACT Chief Minister Andrew Barr said there were no fires burning in the territory, but the impact of blazes across the border was being felt. 

"For Canberrans who are experiencing this day, obviously it is uncomfortable, and I know there is a lot of anxiety in the community, particularly as they see what is unfolding in surrounding New South Wales," he said.
The nation's capital has been choked with smoke from bushfires for days, with the hazardous air pollution forcing shops and attractions to close. 

Conditions across Sydney and southern New South Wales were expected to worsen through Saturday evening, with a cool change expected to hamper firefighting efforts.

The southerly change was expected to reach inner Sydney at 11pm, then the Blue Mountains by midnight.

A cool easterly change was expected in Canberra at around 10pm.

Additional reporting by AAP.


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2 min read
Published 4 January 2020 5:04pm
Updated 22 February 2022 5:25pm
By SBS News
Source: SBS


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