The unprecedented “dirty haze” blanketing eastern Australia has triggered a spike in emergency department presentations, ambulance call-outs and pleas for workers to stay home as bushfires continue across NSW and Queensland.
The NSW environment department said this season’s bushfire emergency has caused “some of the highest air pollution ever seen in NSW”, with hazy conditions “the longest and the most widespread in our records”.
Players at the Australian Open golf championship underway in Sydney’s south were affected by the smoke, with New Zealander Ryan Chisnall – an asthmatic – resorting to wearing a surgical face mask as conditions deteriorated on Thursday afternoon.
Sydney’s air quality index registered registered levels of pollutants on a air with Beijing.
NSW Health said on its website that smoke from bushfires was made up of small particles, gases and water vapour.
“The particles are very small – up to 1/30th the diameter of an average human hair – and are not visible to the human eye.
“The gases in bushfire smoke include carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds,” it read.
Australian golfer Matt Jones described the smokey conditions as “awful”, telling Nine’s Wide World of Sport he’d never endured anything like it, and hoped his kids were tucked up inside their hotel room.
“I’m not sure what the forecast is but the smoke’s not good at all.
“It’s tough to see your golf ball when you’re out there playing, where it finishes.
“Your eyes do burn up. I’ve got that cough like you’ve got something in your lungs, phlegm in your lungs or whatever, but yeah it’s not fun.
Vets also experienced a rise in patients, with dogs and cats turning up at veterinary clinics and hospitals across Sydney with severe asthmatic attacks, breathing difficulties and nausea.
NSW’s peak union body took to social media on Friday morning urging employers to give non-essential workers the option of staying home.
Time lapse from 10-3 of #smoke rolling in to #Sydney. Smoke will improve overnight but will persist Friday, especially in the west. Smoke should further improve over the weekend. Regional areas near fires will also continue to experience smoke. Forecast: https://t.co/N8zjnN6UQQ pic.twitter.com/y1KxdcRq0I
— Bureau of Meteorology, New South Wales (@BOM_NSW) December 5, 2019
Sydney’s east and southwest were rated as “hazardous” for air pollution on Friday, while the northwest had “fair” conditions.
-with AAP
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