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Driver’s amusing number plates perfectly sum up a year of Covid-19, fierce bushfires and flooding in Australia
- Â A hilarious number plate has perfectly summed up Australia’s year of disasters
- Â The licence plate ‘2020SUX’ was spotted on a white Suzuki minivan in AdelaideÂ
- Â Another Adelaide driver has also donned the plate ‘2020WTF’ on their FordÂ
-  It comes after Australia suffered through bushfires, floods and a pandemic Â
A driver’s hilarious number plates have perfectly summed up Australia’s mammoth year of disasters.
The licence plate ‘2020SUX’ was spotted on the back of a white Suzuki APV minivan driving around the streets of Adelaide on Thursday.
It comes after the nation suffered through horrific bushfires, the coronavirus pandemic and wild flooding all within the space of 12 months.Â
The perfect licence plate to summarise this year, ‘2020SUX’, was spotted on the back of a white Suzuki APV minivan (pictured) driving around the streets of Adelaide on Thursday Â
Another ‘2020WTF’ plate was also spotted on a Ford (pictured) in Adelaide last monthÂ
Another hilarious number plate was also spotted on the back of a dark blue Ford in Adelaide.Â
A picture of the plates ‘2020WTF’ were shared to Instagram at the end of November.Â
Commenters were quick to praise the creative and ‘relatable’ choice.   Â
‘Mentally I am here,’ one woman wrote.
‘That’s gold,’ another commenter said.
‘South Australia, great.’Â Â Â Â
Social media users across the world have collectively dubbed 2020 ‘the worst year’ and created the trending hashtag ‘2020sucks’ amid the COVID-19 pandemic.Â
Australia kicked off its marathon year with the 2019 to 2020 bushfire season, also known as ‘Black Summer’.
It comes after Australia has suffered through a mammoth year of horrific bushfires, wild flooding and ongoing coronavirus outbreaks (testing pictured in Sydney’s Northern Beaches)
The major fires peaked during December to January and burned over 18.6million hectares, destroyed over 5,900 buildings and killed at least 34 people.Â
Firefighters and equipment from countries including Canada, New Zealand, Singapore and USA were brought in to fight the fires, particularly in NSW.Â
The coronavirus pandemic also saw Australia descend into a national lockdown, with local outbreaks continuing and international travel bans remaining in place.
NSW confirmed an emerging cluster in Sydney’s Northern Beaches had grown to 28 cases on Friday.
Australia’s east coast has also been battered by wild weather and flash flooding this week.
The Bureau of Meteorology issued flood warnings for parts of Queensland and NSW on Friday.Â
A severe thunderstorm warning for damaging winds and heavy rainfall was also issued for northwest NSW.
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