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Homes razed as bushfires rage in Australia
by Staff Writers
Melbourne (AFP) March 18, 2018

Homes were razed, cattle killed and large swathes of land burnt Sunday as bush and grass fires rage in Australia amid hot and blustery conditions, with residents fleeing flame-filled red skies.

Dozens of blazes in western and southwestern Victoria state began on Saturday and a change in wind direction early Sunday worsened the situation.

Some 40,000 hectares have been damaged, and "hundreds of beef and dairy cattle will be lost as a result of these fires", Victoria's Emergency Management Commissioner Craig Lapsley told reporters Sunday.

Up to 12 homes were "impacted", he added, with broadcaster ABC reporting they were "destroyed".

"We've got fires, major fires, running. They will get larger in size before we get control of these," he added, as the weather bureau predicted peak gusts of up to 110 kph (70 mph).

"No significant injuries, no deaths (in) a very dynamic environment, I would say they (local communities) have done exceptionally well."

Andrew Morrow, the local fire controller at Colac in western Victoria, said two of the bigger fires measuring 3,000 hectares (7,400 acres) and 6,500 hectares were being blown east from the wind changes.

"We know there's a significant number of properties that the fire has impacted," he told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

Residents living near one of the worst-hit areas -- the small town of Terang some 200 kilometres (124 miles) southwest of Melbourne -- were told by authorities it was "too late to leave" and they must "take shelter indoors immediately".

Thousands of homes were left without power and other regions issued with evacuation orders, with fears some of the separate fires could merge in the changing winds.

Elle Moyle was hosting a friend's wedding at a farm in Gazette when a bushfire raged towards the property.

"We smelled the smoke at the venue and within 10 minutes the sky was completely red," she told the ABC.

"The flames were only 100 metres away... the winds were crazy," Moyle said, adding that guests had to shelter in a stable before they managed to escape on a bus.

"We did our best to keep everyone safe and get them out of there but it was very touch and go."

The dramatic scenes came on a weekend of extreme weather in Australia with the northern city of Darwin hit by Category Two Cyclone Marcus. It brought down trees and power lines, but no injuries or serious damage was reported.

The system was the strongest to hit the city in three decades, according to authorities, with clean-up efforts underway.

The storm is now moving west towards several remote island and coastal communities.


Related Links
Forest and Wild Fires - News, Science and Technology


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FIRE STORM
More homes built near wild lands leading to greater wildfire risk
Madison WI (SPX) Mar 14, 2018
More than 10 million acres burned across the country during the 2017 U.S. wildfire season at a cost of more than $2 billion - the largest bill ever. And while many factors affect the risk for wildfires, new research out of the University of Wisconsin-Madison shows that a flurry of homebuilding near wild areas since 1990 has greatly increased the number of homes at risk from wildfires while increasing the costs associated with fighting those fires in increasingly dense developments. The so-ca ... read more

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