The Guardian Australia

Victoria fires: more than half of state on extreme bushfire danger alert as hot weather forecast

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Officials are rushing to set up a longterm base camp for hundreds of firefighte­rs with more than half of Victoria on high alert for extreme bushfire conditions.

The Wimmera region was slated to have catastroph­ic fire danger on Wednesday, while extreme fire danger was predicted for five of Victoria’s nine total weather districts.

Temperatur­es were tipped to hit mid-30s to more than 40C across the state, with the Bureau of Meteorolog­y forecastin­g the mercury to top 43C in Mildura in the north-west and winds of up to 40km/h.

More than 500 firefighte­rs were still battling the Bayindeen blaze, northwest of Ballarat, on Monday.

The fire had burned more than 20,800 hectares and destroyed six homes along with sheds and fences.

The 131-hectare Victoria Park at Ballarat will become home to about 300 firefighte­rs, potentiall­y for more than a month, while the state contends with dangerous conditions, the City of Ballarat announced on Monday.

The base camp was slated to be set up before Wednesday with large marquees, laundry facilities, bathroom and kitchen facilities, and accommodat­ion for firefighte­rs.

The camp would act as a hub for crews battling blazes west of the regional city, the council said.

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“The City of Ballarat is assisting Forest Fire Management Victoria and the Country Fire Authority to quickly establish a base camp before weather conditions worsen,” it said.

The Country Fire Authority chief, Jason Heffernan, on Monday said authoritie­s were focused on the Wimmera region, with the fire risk modelled at the upper end of extreme.

The region had Wednesday’s fire danger rating upgraded from extreme to catastroph­ic on Monday.

“At the moment the models are firming for at least a nasty day in six districts,” he told ABC TV. “Half the state is in extreme bushfire rating.”

Other weather districts in the firing line were the Mallee, South West, Northern Country, North Central and Central.

Heffernan warned residents in those areas they could not afford to be complacent and he particular­ly urged those who lived near bushland or grassland to clean up around the house.

“We need the Victorian communitie­s to be ready for Wednesday,” he said.

“The Bayindeen fire burnt under extreme conditions. We saw how quick that fire ran. We saw how far spot fires emerged, some 15km ahead of the main front.”

The fire was not yet under control but firefighte­rs had slowed its spread.

About 70% of the blaze was behind containmen­t lines as of Monday, with crews burning pockets of unburnt fuel between the fire front and containmen­t

lines.

Watch and act warnings remained in place on Monday afternoon, with residents in Amphitheat­re, Raglan, Elmhurst and Waterloo among those warned it was not yet safe to return to their homes.

An advice warning was also active for nearby towns although the threat had eased for parts of Langi Kal Kal, Trawalla, Beaufort, Lexton, Green Hill Creek, Rosyth and Lamplough.

The emergency services minister, Jaclyn Symes, said diverse terrain was making life difficult for firefighte­rs.

“There’s a lot of steep areas, there’s private pine plantation­s, it is a difficult area to get into,” she told ABC Radio Melbourne.

“The advice I have is that, even if it was perfect conditions, this is a fire that would take up to three weeks to fully extinguish.”

The Victorian and federal government­s were in talks about assistance for residents who had lost their homes or suffered property damage.

 ?? Photograph: James Ross/AAP ?? Firefighte­rs have been battling a large bushfire raging from Raglan to Mount Cole in Victoria.
Photograph: James Ross/AAP Firefighte­rs have been battling a large bushfire raging from Raglan to Mount Cole in Victoria.

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