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A firefighter uses his phone to record a controlled burn near Tomerong, Australia Rick Rycroft/PA images

Australian wildfires: new evacuation notices issued as area the size of Ireland now scorched by blazes

Searing temperatures are expected to return to the southeast of the country tomorrow.

AUSTRALIAN AUTHORITIES HAVE issued new bushfire warnings and evacuation notices as hot weather returns to the southeast of the country, threatening further misery for thousands of people.

Officials have warned some areas are “just at the beginning” of the devastating crisis, which has killed at least 26 people, destroyed over 2,000 homes and scorched 80,000 square kilometres – an area the size of the island of Ireland.

The fires have flared up in the southeast of the country in a months-long crisis, killing nearly half a billion native animals in New South Wales alone, scientists estimate.

While bushfires are common in Australia’s arid summers, climate change has pushed up land and sea temperatures and led to more extremely hot days and severe fire seasons.

Australia experienced its driest and hottest year on record in 2019, with its highest average maximum temperature of 41.9 degrees Celsius recorded in mid-December.

In the south Australian town of Parndana on Kangaroo Island, soldiers went door-to-door advising residents to leave after a large blaze bore down on the area, with temperatures there soaring to 38 degrees Celsius.

That came less than 24 hours after police evacuated Vivonne Bay on the island, an area which was also being threatened by fires that were expected to burn for days.

“The conditions are such that it is continuing to present a significant risk to the firefighters who are working hard to control the fires, and to anyone else in the vicinity,” Country Fire Service chief Mark Jones said.

upi-20200107 An aerial view of wildfire smoke off the coast of Australia UPI / PA Images UPI / PA Images / PA Images

In the neighbouring state of Victoria, officials extended a “state of disaster” for a further 48 hours ahead of scorching temperatures that due to set in on Friday.

“It’s a very dangerous and dynamic situation that will confront us over the next 12, 24 and 36 hours,” Victoria Emergency Management commissioner Andrew Crisp said.

The state’s premier Daniel Andrews warned residents to brace for further devastation in what has already been a months-long crisis.

“We’re just at the beginning of what will be a really, really challenging summer,” he said.

‘Extreme’ danger

Despite cooler weather and rainfall providing some relief in some bushfire-affected areas this week, almost 150 fires were still burning in worst-hit state of New South Wales and in Victoria, the country’s most populated regions.

Vast areas in both states are facing “severe” fire danger Friday, with some areas expected to experience “extreme” conditions.

“Don’t get complacent with the rain that we’ve seen,” Victoria police minister Lisa Neville said.

“These fires are absolutely still moving, still growing in our landscape and they pose significant risk to communities.”

Firefighters have been taking advantage of this week’s milder weather as they raced to contain bushfires ahead of the Friday.

They have been clearing vegetation and carrying out controlled burns in an effort to protect areas like the coastal town of Eden, where a large bushfire is burning to the south.

On Thursday, New South Wales announced it would spend Aus$1.2 billion (€742 million) on restoring infrastructure in fire-ravaged areas.

That comes on top of a separate Aus$2 billion (€1.24 billion) national recovery fund earmarked to help devastated communities.

The bushfire toll has not been limited to human losses — the blazes have also wreaked wide-ranging environmental damage.

Bushfire smoke has shrouded Australia’s major cities in toxic haze for weeks, causing major public health concerns.

The smoke has also travelled more than 12,000 kilometres to Brazil and Argentina, according to weather authorities there.

- © AFP 2019

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    Mute david hynes
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    Jan 9th 2020, 8:46 AM

    Summer 18 was very dry in Ireland and we got fires on the hills, main started by farmers. We all were praying for rain in the end

    In Australia, Think about years of drought, rivers running dry, wood and Bush land bone dry and 40 degrees. It’s an unimaginable situation they are in and will only get worse in the years to come.

    Your seeing climate change in action now, Africa has it for years, but Australia has the media

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    Mute Liam Higgins
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    Jan 9th 2020, 8:59 AM

    @david hynes: where did you get the comment that farmers started most of the fires???

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    Mute Paraic
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    Jan 9th 2020, 9:32 AM

    @david hynes: Correct. Central Africa is burning on a much larger scale than Australia as is Thailand. You can see bush fires around the globe on this website. https://firms.modaps.eosdis.nasa.gov/map/#z:2;c:54.2,42.8;d:2020-01-07..2020-01-09;l:firms_viirs

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    Mute Peter Cavey
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    Jan 9th 2020, 10:12 AM

    @david hynes: January in Australia is our July. It’s not going to cool down till April. That’s so scary. I think they need to pull in every favor from every country they can to come and help. There is no shame in asking for help. Feel so sorry for the Australians.

    11
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    Mute John Kennedy
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    Jan 9th 2020, 10:17 AM

    @Paraic: Researchers Detect a Global Drop in Fires
    Changes in human settlement patterns and agriculture have led to less burning in grasslands, tropical forests, and savannas.
    https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/90493/researchers-detect-a-global-drop-in-fires
    Go figure

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    Mute John Kennedy
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    Jan 9th 2020, 10:17 AM

    @david hynes: How are we seeing global warming in action?

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    Mute david hynes
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    Jan 9th 2020, 10:39 AM

    @Liam Higgins: of course it’s the farmers liam, they wait for a dry spell and then start the fires. Generally in the evening to avoid planes that are set out to spot illegal burning. Unless you think that there is a nationwide team of arsonists, setting fires to clear ferns, bushes, etc?

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    Mute Paraic
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    Jan 9th 2020, 11:15 AM

    @John Kennedy: Interesting that you want us to accept the data from the site you linked to but don’t accept this one from the same website: https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/features/GlobalWarming/page2.php
    Or have you changed your mind and decided that climate change is real now John? Go figure.

    3
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    Mute John Kennedy
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    Jan 9th 2020, 11:19 AM

    @Paraic: No Paraic, I have not changed my mind on the climate change scam, still can not find any evidence to convince me otherwise.

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    Mute david hynes
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    Jan 9th 2020, 11:22 AM

    @John Kennedy: firstly its climate change, not global warming. We had 11 degree for xmas day is just one example, we had 4 months of drought in 2018, just in Ireland with a temperate climate. If you go to the really cold or hot places then the effects are ever more dramatic. Even if it’s all a scam, wouldn’t it be great if we could create our own renewable energy, healthier environment???

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    Mute Paraic
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    Jan 9th 2020, 12:02 PM

    @John Kennedy: So don’t post links to a site as “evidence” supporting your point of view, when you don’t accept the evidence presented elsewhere on the same site. That’s just hipocracy.

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    Mute Daniel Dunne
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    Jan 9th 2020, 2:10 PM

    @david hynes: Christmas Day highs we’re no more than 5c to 8c for much of Ireland following on from -3c to 0c overnight lows. Get your figures right. A 11c max in December isn’t unusual and happens pretty much every December. The absolute max for December is 18.1c recorded in Peamount, Dublin back in 1948.

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    Mute John Kennedy
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    Jan 9th 2020, 3:33 PM

    @Paraic: Paraic it wouldn’t really matter what I post a link to, I would not be able to change your position, here is one link for you
    https://clintel.org/

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    Mute John Kennedy
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    Jan 9th 2020, 3:44 PM

    @david hynes: Did you ever hear the expression “one swallow does not a summer make”, climate is measured over an extended time period, weather is what happened yesterday, and may happen tomorrow, and yes it would be great if we could create our own reliable renewable energy, but we can’t. as I post electricity demand is 4,256Mw so called renewables are generating 302Mw from a potential 3,500Mw, source
    http://smartgriddashboard.eirgrid.com/#roi/wind
    if the wind don’t blow the wind don’t blow, if you want to see what wind generation potential is over the next few days look at the Met Eireann forecast http://www.met.ie, anything under 10Kmh wind speed and the windymills go beddiebyes

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