The Red Dawn Dust Storm That Covered One Third of Australia
On the morning of September 23, 2009, residents of Sydney awoke to a surreal sight: the entire city bathed in an eerie red-orange glow. The Red Dawn dust storm, one of the most severe in Australian history, swept millions of tonnes of topsoil from the drought-stricken interior across New South Wales and into coastal cities. At its peak, the storm reduced visibility to just a few hundred meters, halted flights, and triggered air quality alerts across the east coast. More than a bizarre atmospheric event, Red Dawn was a wake-up call about land degradation, extreme weather, and Australia’s fragile relationship with its arid interior.