Parts of Australia are set to swelter through a scorcher of a week, with temperatures forecast to exceed 40C for several consecutive days.
In the meantime, destructive fires across New South Wales and Western Australia are burning through hundreds of thousands of hectares, with residents being told it was too late to leave.
As weary firefighters are battling multiple emergency fires, a thick haze of smoke continues to blanket much of Sydney.
Air pollution levels are so hazardous that a “public health emergency” has been declared in the NSW capital.
A joint statement signed by 22 health and medical organisations which comprise doctors, nurses and medical scientists has urged federal and NSW governments to “protect the people they represent” and “help alleviate the health and climate crisis”.
In the statement released on Monday morning, the alliance said “there is no safe level of air pollution” and what’s expected in the immediate future “remain hazardous to people’s health”.
They said the toxic air pollution was linked to diseases throughout life including impaired lung development in children, heart disease, lung cancer and premature births.
The Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation, the Australian College for Emergency Medicine, the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand and Lung Foundation Australia are among the signatories.
The peak bodies for specialist doctors, dietitians, Victorian medical scientists and social workers also signed.
Meanwhile, NSW along with South Australia and Victoria can expect to see the worst of the heat, along with elevated heatwave and fire conditions.
Sweltering Christmas weather will hit Adelaide on Tuesday and continue until Friday when the mercury will peak at 44C.
For four straight days, the South Australian capital is predicted to hit temperatures either at or above 40C, while remote parts of the state such as the Nullarbor Plain is forecast to approach 50C.
Victoria’s Broken Hill and Mildura will sizzle through a 46C day on Friday, according to the Bureau of Meteorology.
South Australia’s western districts and Eyre Peninsula will also sweat through hot and sticky nights as temperatures throughout the week reach the high 40s.
Weather conditions will be “right up there” across the country, BOM senior forecaster Tom Boeck said.
“We’re expecting heatwave conditions to be increasing through the week,” he told the ABC.
“With that, there will obviously be increasing fire danger … probably peaking towards the later part of the week with winds also increasing and that’ll be ahead of a change.”
For NSW, residents in the path of the major Gospers Mountain blaze which is more than 378,000 hectares in size have been told it’s too late to leave.
The Rural Fire Service said the fire was impacting Mount Wilson, Mount Irvine, Mount Tomah and Berambing.
The RFS early on Monday advised residents in these areas that fire activity had reduced and posed no immediate threat.
Watch and Act: Gospers Mountain (Hawkesbury LGA). Fire activity has reduced in the areas of Mt Wilson, Mt Irvine, Mt Tomah and Berambing. Although fire is still active in areas, there is currently no immediate threat. More information and advice: https://t.co/b4FQYZqba0 #NSWRFS pic.twitter.com/XXjQZ1t3X6
— NSW RFS (@NSWRFS) December 15, 2019
RFS deputy commissioner Rob Rogers told ABC TV on Sunday evening there were reports of properties being impacted and some being alight.
A home at Mount Wilson was lost and several sheds and buildings at Mount Tomah were destroyed, The Daily Telegraph reported.
Severe heatwave conditions will hit most of NSW by the end of this week.
Total fire bans are in place for Monday for the far North Coast, central ranges, New England, northern slopes and north western fire regions, with the latter four under severe fire danger.
In Western Australia, firefighters are battling three major bushfires burning over more than 20,000 hectares, with two of them threatening lives and homes.
Emergency warnings remain for the two bushfires declared in the northern Perth regions of Yanchep and Mogumber.
- Related: Australia could see hottest day on record next week as Perth heatwave conditions travel east
One house and a Yanchep service station were confirmed to have been destroyed.
The emergency alert remains in place for Woodridge and Seatrees and Breakwater Estates.
DFES said the fire remains stationary but there is a high risk of flare-ups, with the wind due to strengthen and swing on Monday afternoon.
Two temporary evacuation centres were set up at Gumblossom Community Centre and Granville Civic Centre. Community meetings will be held on Monday at 10am and 2.30pm.
Four schools – Two Rocks Primary School, Yanchep Primary School, Yanchep Beach Primary School and Yanchep Secondary College – will be closed on Monday.
-with AAP
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