The Borneo Post

No relief in sight as Australian drought fuels bushfires

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SYDNEY: The drought sweeping through large tracts of Australia is set to intensify over the next three months and is fuelling unseasonal winter bushfires, the leading meteorolog­ical agency and a fire official said yesterday.

The Bureau of Meteorolog­y forecast of more warm, dry weather suggests hopes for a reprieve from what farmers describe as the worst drought they have ever seen are unlikely to be realised before the Australian summer.

An unusually warm winter followed by what is expected to be a warmer-than-average spring “would mean intensific­ation of the existing drought conditions across parts of eastern Australia”, the bureau’s outlook report said.

The report forecast belowavera­ge rainfall for large parts of Australia until November, the early part of the southern hemisphere summer.

Record-low rainfall in some regions and successive seasons of above-average temperatur­es have blighted vast tracts of Australia’s grazing and crop land.

All of New South Wales, the country’s most populous state

There is no real positive outlook at the moment, especially when you do look at the three-month temperatur­e and rainfall outlook. Ben Shepherd, New South Wales Rural Fire Service Inspector

that accounts for a quarter of Australia’s agricultur­al output by value, is officially in drought.

Firefighte­rs there were battling 81 grass and bushfires yesterday, 38 of which remained uncontaine­d, authoritie­s said. While none of the fires posed threats to people or property, it was still an unusual event for the Australian winter.

Almost 650 firefighte­rs were working on the blazes, helped by more than 40 aircraft.

New South Wales Rural Fire Service Inspector Ben Shepherd said the drought had had a “significan­t effect” on the bushfires and was set to continue.

“There is no real positive outlook at the moment, especially when you do look at the three-month temperatur­e and rainfall outlook,” Shepherd told Reuters.

“We need a significan­t amount of rain across New South Wales, not from just the drought aspect but also from the fire aspect,” he said.

Australia sent about 100 firefighte­rs to California on Aug 3 to help American authoritie­s battle deadly wildfires sweeping the northwest of the United States, suggesting that authoritie­s did not expect bushfires at home in the southern winter.

Shepherd said the size and number of fires in Australia were typical of late summer.

“We’re seeing fires on the far south coast (of New South Wales) that we wouldn’t typically see until sometimes as late as January or February, so what we’re seeing is very unusual,” he said.

Australia recorded its fifthdries­t July on record last month. It was the driest January-to- July period in New South Wales since 1965 and marked seven consecutiv­e months of below-average rainfall for the state.

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 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File photo of farmer Jack Hewitt keeping a pig away from his small flock of sheep as he feeds them in a drought-effected property located north of the town of Gunnedah in north-western New South Wales in Australia.
— Reuters photo File photo of farmer Jack Hewitt keeping a pig away from his small flock of sheep as he feeds them in a drought-effected property located north of the town of Gunnedah in north-western New South Wales in Australia.

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