Storm in
sydney
It is a city that usually wakes to brilliant blue skies.
But dawn broke with a dramatic difference in Sydney.
Pulling back their blinds, residents were greeted with an eerie reddish-orange
cloud cloaking all around them.





The gale force winds - measuring in excess of 60mph - also fanned bush fires in
the state.
By noon on Wednesday the storm, carrying an estimated 5 million tonnes of dust,
had spread
to the southern part of Australia's tropical state of Queensland.


The dust storms stripped valuable topsoil from farmlands.


At one stage up to 75,000 tonnes of dust per hour was blown across Sydney and
dumped in the Pacific Ocean.
'We've got a combination of factors which have been building for ten months
already - floods,
droughts and strong winds.'




The outback dust storm has swept across eastern Australia, shrouding Sydney in
a dramatic
red glow.
It's also been wreaking havoc, disrupting transport and placing health
authorities on alert for
widespread respiratory illness.




International flights were diverted from Sydney, ferries on the harbour were
suspended,
and motorists were warned to take care on roads as visibility was dramatically
reduced.






'It did feel like Armageddon because when I was in the kitchen looking out the
skylight,
there was this red, red glow coming through,' one resident.


The blanket of dust stretched hundreds of miles along the coast, from the coal
port of Newcastle north
of Sydney to the steel city of Wollongong in the south, and hundreds of miles
inland to
farming towns like Dubbo and Tamworth.






Weather officials said the blanket of dust would remain for several hours,
until winds eased.





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Dust storms in Australia are not uncommon but are usually restricted to the
inland.
Occasionally, during widespread drought, dust storms reach coastal areas.
Australia is the driest inhabited continent and only Antarctica is drier.
The NSW state government recently cut the state's 2009/10 wheat crop estimate
by
20 per cent because of hot, dry weather across the grain belt.
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The country is one of the most vulnerable nations to climate change, but also
the world's
biggest greenhouse gas emitter per capita as it relies on coal-fired power
stations for the bulk of its electricity.





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