Australia swelters through the third hottest summer ever recorded

Australia has sweltered through its third-hottest summer ever recorded.

Statistics released by the Bureau of Meteorology this week revealed the country this December-February period was 1.62C above the 1961-1990 30-year average.

It marks the third warmest summer since national records began in 1910 – only behind previous records set in 2018-19 and 2019-20.

The national mean maximum temperature was 1.73C above average, and the national mean minimum temperature was 1.5C above average.

Australia’s has sweltered through the third hottest summer ever recorded with figures (pictured) showing the country experienced the third warmest December-February period

The scorching temperatures made it ideal conditions for people to cool off at the beach (pictured beachgoers)

The scorching temperatures made it ideal conditions for people to cool off at the beach (pictured beachgoers)

Western Australia sweated through a particularly hot summer.

Its mean temperature was 1.90C above average – making it the state’s hottest summer on record.

‘Mean maximum temperatures were above average for Tasmania, most of Western Australia, South Australia and New South Wales, the Northern Territory and Queensland and parts of northwestern and far eastern Victoria,’ the bureau said.

‘Summer mean minimum temperatures were above average for nearly all of Australia and highest on record for southeastern Queensland, northeastern New South Wales, Cape York Peninsula and parts of inland Western Australia and the Top End of the Northern Territory.’

The high averages were driven by heatwaves in most of the country in December and February while in January temperatures soared in Western Australia, as well as the central and southern states.

The hottest day recorded over the summer was 49.9C on February 18 at Carnarvon Airport in Western Australia.

The coldest temperature recorded in the period was 4.6C at Tasmania’s Mount Read on December 30.

The above average temperatures were caused by heatwaves across the country with Western Australia (pictured stock image of Nambung National Park) bearing the brunt of the extreme conditions

The above average temperatures were caused by heatwaves across the country with Western Australia (pictured stock image of Nambung National Park) bearing the brunt of the extreme conditions

The national mean maximum temperature was 1.73C above average and the national mean minimum temperature was 1.5C above average (pictured weather map)

The national mean maximum temperature was 1.73C above average and the national mean minimum temperature was 1.5C above average (pictured weather map)

It was also a wet summer with rainfall 18.9 per cent above the average.

While rainfall for the season was above average for most of eastern Australia, ‘areas in western and central Western Australia, southern Northern Territory and Tasmania had a drier than average summer,’ the bureau said.

‘Significant flooding, associated with tropical systems, affected large areas of northern Australia during summer, while severe thunderstorm activity brought extensive flooding to parts of the eastern and southeastern mainland,’ the bureau said.

Looking ahead to Autumn, the bureau says to expect warmer days and nights.

‘(The bureau’s long-range forecast) shows most of Australia has at least an 80 per cent chance of above average temperatures this autumn,’ the bureau said.

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