Australia urges quarter of a million to flee as winds fan huge bushfires
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[January 10, 2020]
By Martin Petty and Swati Pandey
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia urged nearly a
quarter of a million people to evacuate their homes on Friday and
prepared military backup as authorities said the next few hours could be
"very, very challenging" even as rain poured down in some parts.
Defense personnel stood ready to move to bushfire grounds if conditions
became extreme, Prime Minister Scott Morrison told reporters, as soaring
temperatures and erratic winds create dangerous conditions.
"Even with rain in Melbourne, even with forecast better conditions next
week, there is a long way to go in what has been an unprecedented fire
event...and, of course, we know that we have many weeks of the fire
season to run," Daniel Andrews, the premier of Victoria, told a
televised briefing.
"The next few hours are going to be very, very challenging."
While the winds are expected to move through by Saturday morning,
Andrews urged residents to stay on high alert and leave the community
"if you are told to".
Authorities sent emergency texts to 240,000 people in Victoria, telling
them to leave. People in high-risk regions in New South Wales and South
Australia were also urged to think about leaving, but officials did not
say how many.
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GRAPHIC: Sizing up Australia’s bushfires - https://graphics.reuters.com/AUSTRALIA-BUSHFIRES-SCALE/0100B4VK2PN/index.html
Since October, 27 people have been killed and thousands subjected to
repeat evacuations as huge and unpredictable fires scorched more than
10.3 million hectares (25.5 million acres) of land, an area roughly the
size of South Korea.
In the coastal town of Eden in New South Wales, where the alert status
was upgraded to 'watch and act' on Friday evening, smoke filled the
horizon as winds blew smoke and ash.
Shereen and Kim Green, who live on a farm with three houses and 50
cattle just outside Eden, were racing to fill two 1,000-litre tanks of
water.
"This is to put out the spot fires and we'll be staying up all night to
defend our property," said Shereen, as the wind shook her utility
vehicle. "We're taking the opportunity while we can."
Sitting under the town's watchtower, another resident Robyn Malcolm
said: "If it all goes wrong, we'll dash down to the wharf and get on a
tugboat."
Here are key events in the crisis:
* Of 160 fires ablaze across New South Wales (NSW), about 46 were
uncontained. Two were burning at an 'emergency level', eight blazes were
in the "watch and act" category, with the rest at the "advice" level,
the lowest alert rating.
* Neighboring Victoria had 36 fires, with more than 1.3 million hectares
burned. Nine fires were at an emergency level.
* In the alpine region on the border of the southeastern states of
Victoria and New South Wales, two fires were poised to merge and create
a blaze over almost 600,000 hectares (1.5 million acres).
* Victoria emergency services minister Lisa Neville said some
communities had been provided with large containers of satellite phones,
baby formula, food, nappies, and torches in case they are cut off.
* Campaigners protested in Sydney and Melbourne on Friday as part of a
wave of demonstrations planned in major world cities, to spotlight
concerns about Australia's climate change policies.
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NSW Rural Fire Service crews watch on as a fire burns in bushland
close to homes at Penrose in the NSW Southern Highlands, south of
Sydney, Australia, January 10, 2020. TAAP Image/Dan Himbrechts/via
REUTERS
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* Westpac estimated total bushfire losses to date at about A$5
billion ($3.4 billion), higher than the 2009 bushfires in Victoria
but smaller than the Queensland floods in 2010/11. It forecast a hit
of 0.2% to 0.5% on gross domestic product.
* Australia's alpine resorts have dusted off winter snowmaking
machines to blast ice-cold water onto dry ski slopes as fires
threaten the Snowy Mountains region.
* The Insurance Council of Australia increased its estimate of
damages claims from the fires to more than A$900 million, with
claims expected to jump further.
* Health officials in New South Wales urged extra precautions to
avoid heat-related illnesses.
* Australia's wildfires have dwarfed other catastrophic blazes, with
its burned terrain more than twice the extent of that ravaged this
year by fires in Brazil, California and Indonesia combined.
* Of nine fires in the state of South Australia, one was categorized
as an emergency.
* Climate protests were also planned on Friday in cities such as
Canberra, targeting the government's handling of the crisis and its
position on climate change.
* Prime Minister Morrison said he was considering holding a
wide-ranging national inquiry into the bushfires after the immediate
crisis passed.
* Just shy of 2,000 homes have been destroyed in New South Wales,
state authorities said, half during the past 10 days.
* The Commonwealth Bank of Australia is to donate cricketer Shane
Warne's prized "baggy green" cap to a museum after paying more than
A$1 million for it at an auction for bushfire relief.
* Authorities have warned that the huge fires, spurred by high
temperatures, wind and a three-year drought, will persist until
there is substantial rainfall. The weather agency said there was no
sign of that for months.
* Ecologists at the University of Sydney have estimated 1 billion
animals have been killed or injured in the bushfires, potentially
destroying ecosystems.
* Morrison has pledged A$2 billion ($1.4 billion) to a newly created
National Bushfire Recovery Agency.
* About 100 firefighters from the United States and Canada are
helping, with another 140 expected in coming weeks.
* The fires have emitted 400 megatonnes of carbon dioxide and
produced harmful pollutants, the European Union's Copernicus
monitoring program said.
* Smoke has drifted across the Pacific, affecting cities in South
America, and may have reached the Antarctic, the U.N.'s World
Meteorological Organization said.
(Reporting by Colin Packham, Wayne Cole, Swati Pandey and Martin
Petty; Editing by Jane Wardell)
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