The Guardian Australia

NSW and Queensland fires: Sydney to face catastroph­ic fire danger for first time

- Lisa Cox and Christine Tondorf in Taree

The greater Sydney region will face catastroph­ic fire danger on Tuesday for the first time since the rating was introduced and fire authoritie­s say conditions in other parts of New South Wales could also be set to worsen.

The warning was issued as more than 80 fires continued to burn in the north of the state late on Sunday.

Three people have died in the fires and at least 150 properties have been destroyed. The number of properties lost in the emergency is expected to grow as fire grounds become accessible to crews assessing the damage.

On Sunday afternoon, two emergency warnings were issued for fires burning on the north-east and midnorth coast of NSW.

A fire at Bills Crossing, north of Taree, had already burned through almost 12,000 hectares, with the Rural Fire Service warning people in the Johns River area to seek shelter as the blaze approached.

The other warning was issued for an out-of-control fire in the Mt Nardi national park, where people were advised that leaving early was their safest option.

While some weather conditions were expected to ease late on Sunday and into Monday, both the Rural Fire Service and the Bureau of Meteorolog­y warned that dangerous conditions were forecast for Tuesday.

The Rural Fire Service issued a catastroph­ic fire danger warning for the greater Sydney and greater Hunter regions – including the Blue Mountains and the central coast – on Tuesday due to high temperatur­es, strong winds and dry conditions.

Extreme fire danger is forecast in the Illawarra/Shoalhaven region, the north coast, the central ranges, the northern slopes and the north-western regions.

The far north coast, New England, the far south coast, the southern ranges, and the lower central west plains are expecting severe fire danger.

The prime minister, Scott Morrison, and the NSW premier, Gladys Berejiklia­n, visited devastated bushfire communitie­s on Sunday.

The federal government announced that disaster recovery payments of $1,000 per adult and $400 per child would be made available immediatel­y through Centrelink for people affected by fires in NSW and Queensland.

Leo Generaux from Tinonee, about 12km south-west of Taree, said on Sunday he didn’t know if he had a house to return to.

He and his wife had been evacuated twice in three days and had been told his neighbour’s home had been destroyed.

On Sunday, Generaux, aged in his 70s, was at the Club Taree evacuation centre watching for the arrival of Morrison and Berejiklia­n.

“We were allowed to go in on Saturday to see our home and our neighbours, waiting at our door, told us their house had been burnt to the ground. We were in a state of shock,” he said.

“We said, ‘You can stay with us,’ but they said, ‘That’s no good the fire hasn’t finished yet,’ and then in the afternoon we were evacuated again. There was a fire on the other side, the east side.

“The smoke was billowing towards us and we got the phone call, ‘Leave now’. I have no idea if my house is still there. We left in a hurry, only one road was open. That’s now closed. There is no way of telling what is going on at our property.”

In Terania Creek, near the Nightcap national park, Terri Nicholson spent Sunday watching fires move into private property on the western side of the valley and start heading south. Many residents in the immediate vicinity of multiple fires had been evacuated to The Channon, the nearest town.

Nicholson’s parents are Nan and Hugh Nicholson. Forty years ago they hosted the blockade that ultimately stopped logging of the rainforest near their property and saved rainforest in other parts of NSW.

“Nan and Hugh Nicholson hosted the site of the Terania protest to defend this great rainforest from logging and now we’re here defending it due to the effects of climate change,” Nicholson said from her parents’ property.

“I don’t even have the words right now. It’s just gobsmackin­g and distressin­g to witness.”

Nicholson said residents were preparing for conditions to worsen over the next few days.

“We’re seeing rainforest burn. There’s fire threatenin­g our houses right now,” Nicholson said.

“There’s fire trucks, volunteers. The local fire service is incredible, they’re protecting our home. This is the home I grew up in. My childhood home. My parents’ land.

“It’s quite intense to see ancient, iconic rainforest burn – this delicate ecosystem – and see firefighte­rs here risking their lives and just to see global heating in action.”

In Queensland, more than 50 fires were burning on Sunday and emergency warnings were still in place at Cooroibah and Ringtail Creek, north of

Noosa on the Sunshine Coast.

Fires had destroyed houses, sheds and cars and forced thousands of people to flee their homes.

A firefighte­r suffered a broken leg but no lives have been lost or other injuries reported.

The winds and hot and dry conditions that have stoked blazes are set to continue on Sunday, ease on Monday, and worsen on Tuesday, challengin­g crews and people battling to save their homes.

The emergency warnings for Cobraball and nearby Bungundarr­a have eased but people are warned to be on the alert because conditions could get worse.

They face an anxious wait to see if their homes are still standing because they can’t return until it is safe to do so.

Red Cross Queensland’s emergency services manager, Colin Sivalingum, said it was a traumatic time for people in evacuation centres.

“Most people just want to go back home to see what’s actually happening. That’s making them very anxious. That’s what they’re telling us,” he told the ABC.

• Additional reporting by Australian Associated Press

 ?? Photograph: Dan Peled/AAP ?? Smoke from a large bushfire is seen from a roadblock outside Wytaliba, near Glen Innes, on Sunday.
Photograph: Dan Peled/AAP Smoke from a large bushfire is seen from a roadblock outside Wytaliba, near Glen Innes, on Sunday.

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