[Vision2020] CBC News: Australia Hit by Worst Dust Storms in 70 Years

Ted Moffett starbliss at gmail.com
Fri Sep 25 10:43:51 PDT 2009


Australia hit by worst dust storms in 70 years Dust from Outback casts
Sydney under eerie orange glow *Last Updated: Wednesday, September 23, 2009
| 2:02 PM ET *
**
http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2009/09/22/australia-sydney-dust-storm-outback.html

A giant cloud of red dust has settled over Australia's largest city, closing
the country's largest airport and prompting a spike in emergency calls.

The dust cloud settled over about a dozen towns and cities in two states on
Wednesday as strong winds snatched up red topsoil in the country's dry
interior and carried it hundreds of kilometres east.

The cloud of Outback grit swept into Sydney, casting the city under an
orange glow, and blowing into the Pacific Ocean.

"It did feel like Armageddon, because when I was in the kitchen looking out
the skylight, there was this red glow coming through," Sydney resident Karen
told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio.
10 dry years

Australia's weather bureau said the dust storm is among the worst to hit the
country since the 1940s.

"These dust storms are some of the largest in the last 70 years," said Nigel
Tapper, an environmental scientist at Monash University. "Ten very dry years
over inland southern Australia and very strong westerlies have conspired to
produce these storms."

International flights were diverted from Sydney to other airports and some
domestic flights were cancelled due to unsafe visibility. Passenger ferries
around the city were also halted for safety reasons.

Ambulance services in the city reported about 250 emergency calls from
people experiencing breathing difficulties. People with asthma or heart or
lung diseases were urged not to go outside and to keep their medicine
inhalers handy.

Officials reported that the dust set off smoke alarms in some buildings in
the city's business district. The conditions also forced some construction
projects to be temporarily halted.

Drivers were being warned to use caution on area roads.
Record particle pollution

The particle pollution in Sydney hit a record since levels began to be
recorded in 1970 because of the dust, officials said.

Readings in the city were showing up to 15,500 micrograms of particulate
matter per cubic metre, said New South Wales Environment Department
atmospheric manager Chris Eiser. A normal reading on a clear day is between
10-20 micrograms, he said.

Though much of the dust in Sydney had settled by the afternoon, officials
reported the grit was being blown farther north into Queensland and the
capital of Brisbane was falling under its debris by early evening.

In the Outback, officials reported that some towns were under a complete
blackout on Wedneday due to the dust storms. Some mines in the region have
been forced to shut down until the storms settled.

The dust storms are expected to continue into Thursday, with the red dust
expected to reach New Zealand about 2,220 kilometres away.

University of Queensland climatologist Samuel Marx told the Australian
Broadcasting Corp. a storm of this size can move between eight and 40
million tonnes of dust.

The Bureau of Meteorology said a big cold front in New South Wales caused
severe thunderstorms and gale-force winds, which whipped up the dust from
inland and spread it across Australia's most populous state. Winds of more
than 100 km/h also fanned bushfires in the state.

"We've got a combination of factors which have been building for 10 months
already — floods, droughts and strong winds," Craig Strong, an official with
DustWatch at Griffith University in Queensland, told Reuters.

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Vision2020 Post: Ted Moffett
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