Australia launches heatwave service to facilitate early emergency response
Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology (BOM)on Tuesday announced the launch of a heatwave service that can help Australians to get better prepared and lessen the impacts of heatwave events.
The service, provided by the BOM and partner health and emergency service agencies across Australia, can issue an alert through the BOM’s weather app and website that a heat hazard is forecast within the coming four days.
It will also come along with sets of action statements aligned to the heatwave severity, agreed with partner agencies.
The BMO said the release followed a successful trial which showed that the new warning service had provided timely information about the health risks of the extreme heat.
It also helped to ensure health departments were better equipped to assist those vulnerable to heatstroke, BMO added.
A heatwave occurs when the maximum and the minimum temperatures are unusually hot over a three-day period at a location.
It has been Australia’s most dangerous environmental hazard, resulting in more community deaths than bushfires, floods, cyclones, and severe storms combined, according to the BOM.