The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australia, facing extreme weather, gains upper hand on more than 100 bushfires

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SYDNEY: The threat from more than 100 fires burning across Australia’s northeast eased over the past 24 hours, lawmakers and emergency workers said yesterday, although unfavourab­le weather conditions are set to continue.

Emergency workers warned on Wednesday that a spate fires had reached emergency levels, triggering an evacuation of more than 8,000 people from the town of Gracemere, about 600km north of the Queensland state capital, Brisbane.

Firefighte­rs extinguish­ed the biggest fires after working through the night.

More than 100 fires remained alight but none was considered to pose an imminent threat, the Queensland Rural Fire Service said.

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said residents must continue to monitor emergency warnings.

“What we experience­d yesterday was off the charts,” Palaszczuk told reporters in Brisbane. “We’re still not out of the woods. There’s still a long way to go.”

The Bureau of Meteorolog­y said temperatur­es across the state would ease to 33 degrees Celsius (91.4 Fahrenheit) yesterday, down from the highs of around 40 C recorded earlier in the week.

Rain was also expected on Friday, the bureau said, offering some respite.

The hot, dry weather on Australia’s northeast coast was in stark contrast to conditions in Sydney, Australia’s largest city, on Wednesday.

More rain fell across Sydney on Wednesday than would normally be seen throughout the whole of November, the meteorolog­y bureau said.

The torrential rain caused flash flooding, left hundreds of people without electricit­y and caused widespread transporta­tion delays. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Local resident Jeanette Schwindt inspects her destroyed shed and water tanks after a bushfire swept through the area at Mount Larcom, located west of the township of Gladstone in Queensland, Australia. — Reuters photo
Local resident Jeanette Schwindt inspects her destroyed shed and water tanks after a bushfire swept through the area at Mount Larcom, located west of the township of Gladstone in Queensland, Australia. — Reuters photo

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