Gulf Today

Serbia boosts efforts to contain over 300 wildfires

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MOSCOW: Russia’s forest service said there were nearly 300 wildfires blazing across the vast country’s northern wilderness on Saturday, as it atempted to contain them with methods including explosives and cloud seeding.

Freakishly warm weather across large swathes of Siberia since January, combined with low soil moisture, have contribute­d to a resurgence of wildfires that devastated the region last summer, the European Union’s climate monitoring network said this week.

Both the number and intensity of fires in Siberia and parts of Alaska have increased since mid-june, resulting in the highest carbon emissions for the month -- 59 million tonnes of CO2 -- since records began in 2003, it said.

Russia’s Aerial Forest Protection Service said it was trying to suppress 136 fires over 430sq km as of Saturday.

Firefighte­rs are using explosives to contain the fires and seeding clouds with silver iodide to encourage rain, it said.

However 159 other fires have been deemed too remote and expensive to handle, with over 333,000 hectares currently ablaze in areas where firefighti­ng efforts have stopped, it said.

The area currently burning is still considerab­ly smaller than a week ago, when the service reported fires over a total of two million hectares.

From mid-june, regions in Russia’s northern Siberia, including beyond the Arctic circle, have registered unpreceden­ted heat records.

Russia’s weather service expert Roman Vilfand said that anti-cyclones -- which create abnormally clear skies with no clouds or rain -- had increased in the northern hemisphere.

In the Arctic, where the sun doesn’t set in the summer, this means that sunlight is heating the Earth’s surface around the clock, increasing the risk of fires, he said.

On Thursday, the Russian weather service said wildfires this year have already covered an area that is 9.6 percent larger than last year over the same period. Fresh satellite images showed Saturday that the largest fires are still in Russia’s vast Yakutia region, which is sparsely populated and borders the Arctic Ocean.

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