From the BBC:
“Australia fires: New South Wales
blazes all 'contained'”
All of the bushfires in New South
Wales (NSW) are now considered contained, say fire officials in the Australian
state. The NSW Rural Fire Service said
it was "great news" after "a very traumatic, exhausting and
anxious" time. The development is thanks
in part to heavy rain, which has lashed the state since last weekend. But the
severe storms led to flash flooding in Queensland where a 75-year-old man is
reported to have died. Record rainfall caused chaos in Sydney, and the weather
woes are set to continue, with further storms expected along the east coast
over the next few days. Flood warnings have been issued for NSW and for
southern Queensland. Ex-tropical cyclone Uesi will bring winds of up to 130km/h
to the tiny Lord Howe Island, about 600km off the east coast. Residents and
tourists on the island have been warned to seek shelter from the
"destructive winds".
NSW bushfires:
5.4 million hectares of land burned
2,439 homes destroyed
11,264 bush or grass fires
24m litres of fire retardant used
'Suffered so much' "After what's been a truly devastating
fire season for both firefighters and residents, who've suffered so much this
season, all fires are now contained in New South Wales," RFS Assistant
Commissioner Rob Rogers said on Thursday. It is the first time in the fire
season that containment - meaning firefighters managing to build a perimeter
around the fire, so it cannot spread further - has been achieved. While there was still some fire activity in the
south of the state, said the RFS, emergency workers could now "really
focus on helping people reboot".
Australia has always had a fire season, with naturally occurring blazes
sparked during the dry summer season, but this year's season has been
unprecedented in the scale and intensity of the fires. Across the country, fires have killed at
least 33 people and destroyed thousands of homes in the past few months. More than 11 million hectares of land - an
area comparable to the size of England - has been affected across all states
and territories. NSW has been the
worst-affected state. Two blazes alone - the Currowan and Gospers Mountain
fires - each burned about 500,000 hectares.
But both were declared out after rains earlier this week, along with
dozens of smaller fires.
Flooding in Queensland: Further north, heavy rainfall in Queensland
on Wednesday and Thursday led to flash flooding and power outages across the
state. A record 232mm of rain was recorded in 24 hours at Sunshine Coast
airport. A 75-year-old kayaker was reported missing on Sunday after heading out
on Mary River. On Thursday, Queensland
Police said a body had been found. A
26-year-old woman has also been reported missing and the search for her is being
impeded by the poor conditions, according to police. More storms are forecast
for Queensland and NSW, and areas still recovering from bushfires are likely to
be hit, according to senior meteorologist Grace Legge.
^ This is both good and bad news.
It’s good because the deadly wildfires are completely out. It’s bad because now
there is flooding to deal with. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-51484814
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