Australian firefighters fear dozens of bushfires in remote mountains in
the southeast could join up to form major fire-fronts, driven by hot
weather in the drought-plagued region.
Nearly 2,000 firefighters battled more than 50 blazes in rugged,
inaccessible mountains of Victoria state as temperatures rose above 30
degrees Celsius (86 Fahrenheit).
"We are headed for probably the worst fire summer period we have ever
had in Victoria. We don't expect these fires to go out," state Premier
Steve Bracks told local newspapers.
Tourists were urged not to visit the popular Victorian Alps, where
blazes have already destroyed more than 12,000 hectares (30,000 acres)
of bushland.
As authorities moved to scramble more heavy water-bombing helicopters,
firefighters said strong winds and high temperatures over coming days
could fan the fronts and push fires more than 20 kilometres (12 miles)
from current positions.
"It s expected in the next couple of days some of these fires will join
together and form larger fires," environment department spokesman Kevin
Monk said.
Firefighters say Australia faces an extreme fire danger this summer
after a worsening drought left rural areas bone dry. Scientists fear
climate change will bring more frequent higher temperatures and less
rainfall to parts of Australia.
In neighbouring New South Wales, fire crews were fighting blazes
threatening to wipe out one of the last remaining outposts of healthy
koalas.
The fires are burning in the Pilliga scrub nature reserve, 350 km
northwest of Sydney, which is home to one of the most genetically
diverse koala colonies.
"The wind direction is against us getting in there and so we are just
hoping for a change in the weather," a spokeswoman for Sydney's Taronga
Zoo told Reuters.
The Pilliga fire closed a 118 kilometre stretch of one of Australia's
major arterial roads, the Newell Highway, between Narrabri and
Coonabarabran.
In the tinder-dry South Australian riverland, more than 170 firefighters
were still struggling to control a blaze sparked by lightning which has
burnt more than 115,000 hectares of scrub.
In January 2005, the deadliest bushfires in 22 years killed nine people
in South Australia.
Four people were killed and 530 homes destroyed in Canberra in 2003.
That same year, bushfires fuelled by drought ravaged a slice of
Australia three times the size of Britain.
(Por Rob Taylor,
Planet Ark, 06/12/2006)