The Guardian (USA)

Australia fires could be out of control for months, says fire chief

- Ben Doherty in Sydney

It could be months before eastern Australia has more than a million hectares of bushfires under control, the New South Wales fire chief has warned, as the country faces one of its worst bushfire outbreaks.

After relief that no further lives were lost on Tuesday, concern was growing over unpredicta­ble winds worsening fires in the neighbouri­ng state of Queensland on Wednesday, with much hotter temperatur­es also predicted for the Sydney area in the coming days.

Gusty winds changing direction are predicted to fan flames in new directions and widen “catastroph­ic” fire fronts in Queensland and northern NSW, where more than 100 fires – one more than 150,000 hectares (370,000 acres) in size – are burning.

Forecaster­s warned that “dry lightning” strikes could ignite new blazes, with fires worsening when hotter temperatur­es arrive over the weekend. Temperatur­es in Queensland are currently up to 8C higher than average.

Shane Fitzsimmon­s, the commission­er of the NSW rural fire services, said: “The real challenge is we have an enormous amount of country that is still alight. They won’t have this out for days, weeks, months. Unfortunat­ely the forecast is nothing but above-average temperatur­es and below-average rainfall over the next few months and we’ve still got summer around the corner.”

The current fires in NSW cover four times the land area that burned during the whole of 2018, according to Fitzsimmon­s. There are also fires in Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory.

While the extent of the bushfires is less than those in New South Wales in 1974-75 , which destroyed 4.5m hectares (11m acres), forecaster­s and fire chiefs are concerned that so many fires are already under way before high summer.

An extreme and persistent drought has left much of the two states tinderdry, with forests, grasslands, and farmland vulnerable to dry lightning strikes or accidental blazes.

Three people died in out-of-control bushfires at the weekend, two of them apparently trying to flee fast-moving fire fronts in cars.

In one of Australia’s largest peacetime military mobilisati­ons, the army is expected to be deployed – including an unpreceden­ted compulsory call-up of reserve soldiers – to assist in the firefighti­ng and the clean-up after fires.

Firefighte­rs from New Zealand and from neighbouri­ng states have helped NSW tackle the fires, as pictures on social media showed firefighte­rs snatching a moment of rest lying by the roadside.

“There is no doubt they have flogged themselves silly. They are extremely drained but they are passionate and steadfast in their resolve to do the very best they can for their com

munity,” added Fitzsimmon­s.

On Tuesday, hundreds of schools were closed, and entire towns evacuated, as temperatur­es in the high 30s celsius and gusty winds fanned dozens of existing fires across NSW and Queensland.

NSW had declared an unpreceden­ted “catastroph­ic” rating for Sydney and surroundin­g regions for Tuesday, when firefighti­ng conditions were at their worst. Residents of fireprone areas were warned that fires would not be able to be stopped in those conditions, and that houses were not designed to withstand fires of that intensity.

NSW remained in a state of emergency, and “emergency warnings” have been issued for 13 separate fires posing imminent threat to life. There were more than 70 fires burning across the state, and more than 40 were out of control.

There are suspicions a fire in the northern Sydney suburb of Turramurra may have been deliberate­ly lit.

In Queensland, 50 fires were burning, according to state authoritie­s.

Bushfires are a regular occurrence during Australian summers, but the intensity of this year’s fires, and how early in the season they have arrived, have unleashed an acute political debate over the impact of climate change in exacerbati­ng Australia’s fire vulnerabil­ity.

The prime minister, Scott Morrison, whose conservati­ve coalition government has been consistent­ly criticised over its support for coal-mining and power plants, inaction on climate change, and Australia’s rising carbon emissions, has refused to answers questions on climate change worsening fires.

His deputy prime minister, Michael McCormack, from the country-based Nationals party, said concerns over climate change while fires were burning were a “disgrace”.

“They don’t need the ravings of some pure, enlightene­d and woke capital city greenies at this time.”

But critics – some of whom had lost homes in the fires – argued the fires presented the reality of the impact of the climate crisis.

As Morrison visited a fire command site in northern NSW, a protester heckled: “Climate change is real. Can’t you see?” before he was escorted out of the building.

The opposition Labor party has also been condemned over its climate policies. In the wake of a general election defeat this year, it appears set to soften the 45% emissions reduction target that was party policy.

The opposition leader, Anthony Albanese, was confronted by by Ginger O’Brien, a resident of Nimbin, a famed counter-culture retreat on the north coast of NSW, who told him: “Shame on you.”

“Your house is not burning. My house is burning down,” an incensed O’Brien said. “What are you doing? Nothing. You’re laughing. You’re having a circus. You’re playing with fire.”

Fitzsimmon­s said for days ahead there would be more dangerous weather, as hot, dry and windy conditions returned. Friday, Saturday and Sunday are predicted to be extreme – though not catastroph­ic – weather conditions.

“We can expect to see elevated fire dangers again. I don’t have anything to suggest catastroph­ic at this stage, but severe and above is likely,” he said.

In one of the largest peacetime mobilisati­ons of Australian forces, the defence minister, Linda Reynolds, is preparing to send army, navy and air force reserve forces – the equivalent of the UK’s Army Reserve – into the fire zone to assist with evacuation­s and logistics.

The military interventi­on might even include an unpreceden­ted compulsory call-up of reserve forces, such is the scale of the fire damage.

 ?? Photograph: Dan Peled/AAP ?? Firefighte­rs take a break in Nana Glen, NSW.
Photograph: Dan Peled/AAP Firefighte­rs take a break in Nana Glen, NSW.
 ?? Photograph: Darren Pateman/AAP ?? Children’s play equipment in a burnt-out area of Possum Brush, NSW.
Photograph: Darren Pateman/AAP Children’s play equipment in a burnt-out area of Possum Brush, NSW.

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