This Article is From Sep 27, 2009

Sydney: Second dust storm in a week

Sydney: Another dust storm covered Sydney, Australia, and the eastern New South Wales state on Saturday.

The Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) has issued a severe weather warning for damaging winds over the Australian Capital Territory and parts of New South Wales state on Saturday. A cold front is moving from the southeast across the rest of the state on Saturday, bringing raised dust with it.

The dust storm hit central western New South Wales state, including Bathurst and Orange, in the early morning and had started to clear by early Saturday.

This is the second dust storm to converge on Sydney this week. Visibility in Sydney was at 5,000 metres, compared to 500 metres on Wednesday, when thick red dust blanketed the city in the worst dust storm in 60 years.

Wednesday's storm shrouded Sydney and surrounding areas for about eight hours, blotting out landmarks such as the Sydney Opera House and Harbour Bridge and even reaching underground to coat subway stations.

The haze, churned by powerful winds that lifted thousands of tons of topsoil from the arid and drought-stricken inland, was visible from space, appearing as a huge brown smudge in satellite photographs of Australia.

The Sydney Morning Herald called it "the day the country blew into town."

No one was hurt in the storm, though health officials responded to hundreds of calls in two states from people complaining of breathing difficulties.

Flights at Sydney Airport have not been affected by the dust storm on Saturday.
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