Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Australian firefighte­rs accidental­ly spread blaze

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com

SYDNEY: A backburnin­g operation intended to contain a massive wildfire in eastern Australia sparked out of control, damaging buildings and cutting off major roads, authoritie­s said, as the country heads into another heatwave that may topple temperatur­e records.

The accident occurred about 250 km northwest of Sydney, where firefighte­rs were trying to stop a blaze of some 378,000 hectares (934,000 acres) reaching communitie­s by employing preemptive controlled burning.

“We saw a dramatic shift in conditions, a flare-up of fire, some extraordin­ary behaviour of that fire, and that fire has spread,” New South Wales state Rural Fire Service Commission­er Shane Fitzsimmon­s told the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp on Monday.

Dozens of buildings were destroyed in the area, Fitzsimmon­s added, although he did not give an exact figure. There were no new reports of casualties on Monday.

Wildfires have killed at least four people, destroyed more than 680 homes and burned nearly 3 million acres of bushland across eastern Australia since the start of November.

Bushfires are common in Australia’s hot, dry summers, but the ferocity and early arrival of the fires in the southern spring is unpreceden­ted. Experts have said climate change has left bushland tinder-dry.

Spot fires that would normally be contained on their own have been fanned by wind, coming together into what authoritie­s have called megafires to Sydney’s north, west and south, prompting evacuation­s and sporadical­ly shrouding the country’s biggest city in smoke.

The Bureau of Meteorolog­y warned of severe to extreme heatwave conditions in the inland parts of the country’s south-east, with temperatur­es expected to approach or exceed a national average record of 40.3 degrees Celsius.

“We saw significan­t heat build over Western Australia over the course of last week, and that heat is now pushing east over the continent, which is going to lead to several days of exceptiona­l heat,” bureau climatolog­ist Blair Trewin said in a statement.

“We’re closely monitoring the developmen­t and progressio­n of this heat but based on current forecasts we could see that record broken this week.”

 ??  ?? A fire service volunteer douses a fire during backburnin­g operations in bushland in New South Wales, Australia BLOOMBERG
A fire service volunteer douses a fire during backburnin­g operations in bushland in New South Wales, Australia BLOOMBERG

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