Callum Ferguson of the Thunder has a drink as smoke haze stops play in a BIg Bash game in Canberra.

Day two of the Sydney test shapes as the biggest smoke challenge for cricket officials with temperatures expected to soar and hazy conditions forecast.

More attention is likely to be on the air than the ground for Australia's third encounter with New Zealand as the New South Wales bushfire crisis rolls on.

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A Big Bash match was abandoned in Canberra this month and authorities will treat smoke like rain at the Sydney Cricket Ground by calling players from the field if conditions become unsafe or visibility is poor.

Temperatures are expected to hit 45 degrees in Sydney's west by day two on Saturday, with the city forecast to be slightly cooler closer to Moore Park.

BRENDON THORNE/GETTY A member of the crowd looks on as smoke haze forces a stoppage to play during the Big Bash League match between the Sydney Thunder and the Adelaide Strikers in Canberra.

Regardless, that has the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) concerned the city's air quality will again become poor into Sunday, with winds also expected from the north.

"With that second very hot spell, we would expect to see a continuation of smoke haze and poor air quality into the weekend, if not further (deterioration)," a BoM spokesman said.

More than 3 million hectares of land has been burnt in NSW's fires this summer.

The issue of smoke is a difficult one for cricket officials.

The Australian Institute of Sport lists an air quality index (AQI) rating of 150 as hazardous for intense exercise while the NSW governments has 200 regardless of activity.

However the ICC's guidelines only state that it is not hazardous until an AQI of 300 is reached.

BRENDON THORNE/GETTY IMAGES A security guard stands amongst smoke haze during the Big Bash League match between the Sydney Thunder and the Adelaide Strikers at Manuka Oval on December 21, in Canberra.

Cricket Australia (CA) consider all guidelines when considering if venues are safe for play, while the test will be in the hands of ICC umpires.

Meanwhile there are also questions over how the index is measured.

It is judged on a rolling 24-hour measurement, meaning it takes a longer for the AQI to rise even when smoke blows in.

CA and the players' association are in the midst of developing a proper framework for dealing with smoke, with Dr John Orchard involved.

Cricket has already been affected in Sydney in the past month, with some men's and women's grade matches called off.

Paramedics were called at least twice to one game as two non-asthmatic players experienced breathing difficulties.

NSW spinner Stephen O'Keefe also labelled conditions "shocking" and "toxic" in a Sheffield Shield game which continued at the SCG while it was smothered by smoke.

Players this week have been at lengths to insist cricket was far from the most important issue in the fire dramas.

"Let's put this in perspective, we play cricket and there are people out there losing their lives and livelihoods," Australian spinner Nathan Lyon said.

"A bit of smoke doesn't worry us. We play a game. The true heroes of this world are the firefighters fighting fires."

Australia lead the series 2-0, after wins in Perth and Melbourne.