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		Rain will not extinguish Amazon fires for weeks, weather experts say
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		 [August 27, 2019] 
		By Jake Spring 
 BRASILIA (Reuters) - Weak rainfall is unlikely to 
		extinguish a record number of fires raging in Brazil's Amazon anytime 
		soon, with pockets of precipitation through Sept. 10 expected to bring 
		only isolated relief, according to weather data and two experts.
 
 The world's largest tropical rainforest is being ravaged as the number 
		of blazes recorded across the Brazilian Amazon has risen 79% this year 
		through Aug. 25, according to the country's space research agency.
 
 The fires are not limited to Brazil, with at least 10,000 square 
		kilometers (about 3,800 square miles) burning in Bolivia near its border 
		with Paraguay and Brazil.
 
 While Brazil's government has launched a firefighting initiative, 
		deploying troops and military planes, those efforts will only extinguish 
		smaller blazes and help prevent new fires, experts said. Larger infernos 
		can only be put out by rainfall.
 
 The rainy season in the Amazon on average begins in late September and 
		takes weeks to build to widespread rains.
 
		
		 
		
 The rain forecast in the next 15 days is concentrated in areas that need 
		it least, according to Maria Silva Dias, a professor of atmospheric 
		sciences at University of Sao Paulo. Less precipitation is expected in 
		parts of the Amazon experiencing the worst fires, she added.
 
 The far northwest and west of the Brazilian Amazon rainforest will see 
		more rain in coming weeks but the eastern parts will remain very dry, 
		Refinitiv data show.
 
 Even areas with more rain will only get isolated showers, the experts 
		said.
 
 "In some points you could put out some fires, certainly, but these are 
		isolated points, it's not the whole area," Dias said.
 
 "The whole area needs it to rain more regularly, and this will only 
		happen further down the line, around October."
 
 Enough rain has to be concentrated in a short enough period to put out a 
		fire, otherwise the water will just evaporate, Dias said.
 
 She estimated it would take at least 20 millimeters of rain within 1-2 
		hours to put out a forest fire, with more required for more intense 
		blazes.
 
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			A tract of the Amazon jungle burning is seen in Canarana, Mato 
			Grosso state, Brazil August 26, 2019. REUTERS/Lucas Landau 
            
 
            The state of Acre, in the west of Brazil on the border with Peru, is 
			expected to get more fire relief from rains than most of the Amazon. 
			The number of fires in Acre has more than doubled so far this year 
			compared with the year-ago period, with 90 fires registered from 
			Aug. 21-25 alone, according to INPE data.
 The western half of the state will get 57.6 mm over the next 15 
			days, while the east of the state will get 33.5 mm, Refinitiv data 
			show.
 
 Rondonia and southern Amazonas state are expected to get 15-29 mm 
			across the area in the next 15 days.
 
 "In some areas it could reduce the fires, not in general," said 
			Matias Sales a meteorologist for Brazil weather information firm 
			Climatempo.
 
 The 15-day rain forecast is at or below the average for this period 
			in previous years, according to Climatempo.
 
 The eastern Amazon will stay dry over the next 15 days, with little 
			or no rain in parts of Mato Grosso, Para and Tocantins where fires 
			are up 54% to 161% compared with last year.
 
 The dry season, which varies among parts of the Amazon but runs 
			several months up to September, has been particularly dry this year, 
			Dias said. Mato Grosso has been parched by a cold front that hit 
			earlier in the year, she said.
 
 Dias said she hoped the military would help to prevent new fires but 
			putting out existing fires is a tougher task.
 
 
            
			 
			"The small fires will be extinguished but the big fires will go on 
			for a while," she said.
 
 (Reporting by Jake Spring; Editing by Richard Chang)
 
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