State
of emergency declared as bushfire conditions worsen
Premier
Barry O'Farrell has declared a state of emergency across NSW for the
next 30 days, which will give special powers to all emergency
services to force evacuations and deal with what could be a
catastrophe
.
SMH,
20 October, 2013 The last time such an order was used was in March 2012, to cope with devastating floods.
The
entire Blue Mountains and the suburbs of western Sydney around
Penrith and Richmond are in danger of burning over the next few days,
as hotter and drier than expected weather conditions combine with
huge fire fronts already burning, the NSW Rural Fire Services
Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons has said.
The
dire predictions come after it became clear on Sunday that the
forecast for high temperatures, low humidity and high winds was much
worse than predicted last week, the commissioner said.
"We
are not in a catastrophic [weather] ratings scale [but] we are
talking about fire danger ratings that will be in the severe category
and you overlay that with the fires that are already burning and it's
a whole new ball game," Mr Fitzsimmons said.
The
worst case scenario, modelling suggested, was that "the
communities of the Blue Mountains from Mt Victoria and Blackheath all
the way down to Penrith will be affected by fire, and also the Bells
Line of Road and then into north-western Sydney and Richmond".
The
official NSW property toll is 208 homes destroyed and 122 damaged. A
63-year-old man has died. There have been 610 insurance claims for
damage estimated at $43 million, a number expected to rise
significantly.
The
worst fire disaster in NSW for at least 45 years could lead to the
forced evacuations from high-population centres such as Katoomba and
Leura over the next three days.
Temperatures
in the 30s and wind gusts of up to 100km/h could threaten all Blue
Mountains communities, Mr Fitzsimmons warned.
Mr
Fitzsimmons said more firefighters were being called in.
Other
fires are still burning, including in the Wyong area, the
Illawarra, and Port Stephens. There is also "a fairly large
fire" near Singleton and Muswellbrook. Depending
on wind speeds and directions later this week, Budgewoi and
Toukley could come under threat from the fire now burning around
Wyong. "Under the hot, dry and windy conditions that are coming,
none of these fire ground areas are safe," he said.
But
these were all dwarfed by the Blue Mountains fires, Mr
Fitzsimmons said, because they did not involve mountainous and
inaccessible terrain.
‘‘I
hope like hell that at the end of this week people are criticising me
because we’ve acted on forecasts and it didn’t happen,’’ Mr
Fitzsimmons said. ‘‘But what would be worse would be if we didn’t
act on the forecasts.’’
The
hottest day of this coming week is expected to be Monday. Tuesday
might bring rain but it might be as little as 2 millimetres, Mr
Fitzsimmons said - not enough to have a positive effect. The wind
strengths would be worst on Wednesday.
‘‘There
is no doubt these fires will continue to grow. The only uncertainty
is to what extent,’’ he said.
When
asked why, if it was expected to be so bad, he was not advising
everyone in the mountains to leave, Mr Fitzsimmons said: ‘‘In
some areas that is exactly what we are talking about [but] we cannot
sensibly look at demanding [that we empty] the entire Blue Mountains
of its population. It may not be necessary to do that or it may in
some areas, depending on developments in the coming days.’’
Assistant
Police Commissioner Alan Clarke warned: "Police will be doing
forced evacuations if necessary.”
“Undoubtedly
that will cause distress to those people," Premier Barry
O'Farrell told a news conference on Sunday at the RFS headquarters,
where he and Emergency Services Minister Mike Gallacher flanked the
fire and police chiefs. "It may cause some wider controversy but
it's clear that at times like this that it's better to be safe than
sorry.”
After
a briefing at the RFS headquarters at Lidcombe, Mr O'Farrell said the
destruction of 208 homes “may not be the end of it”, so people in
targeted areas would be asked to leave their homes.
That
process began on Sunday when residents of the village of Bell were
advised to evacuate. And residents west of Bilpin village, including
the communities of Mt Tomah and Berambing, were told to leave along
the Bells Line of Road towards Richmond. In Bilpin residents were
told they could stay but were warned power was likely to be cut and
they might be unable to leave for days because fires would block
roads in and out. But Mr O'Farrell said: “If the choice is life of
property, the choice clearly should be life.”
Mr
Clarke said authorities would provide as much information as possible
for people to save their properties but he appealed for them to
evacuate as soon as that advice was issued. “At the end of the day,
we hope we have buildings standing, but if we don't have buildings
standing, we don't want bodies in them,” he said.
"It's
important to understand that the single tragedy we've had in these
fires so far has been … where an individual chose to remain and
fight a fire."
Emergency
services could not tie up resources "wrestling with one person
to get off a property if they are capable and able to make a
decision". They needed to focus on people who couldn't help
themselves.
With
worsening conditions forecast, culminating on Wednesday, Mr
Fitzsimmons said: “We are talking wind strengths starting at 25 to
30 kilometres [an hour] and gusting up to 50, 60 and right up to –
as the days roll on – wind strengths of 70 to 100 kilometres per
hour across of these fireground areas.”
Mr
Fitzsimmons said the entire Blue Mountains community needed to be on
alert for possible evacuations, from Mt Victoria and Blackheath to
Katoomba and Leura, “right down to the fire burning in Springwood”
and beyond to Kurrajong and Richmond.
“We
are not talking necessarily at this stage of mass evacuations of the
entire Blue Mountains community,” he said. “But what we can't
rule out is that there will be parts that may well be evacuated. We
have very changing, dynamic, volatile situations that will unfold
over the next three to four days.”
Asked
how evacuations would work in bigger centres such as Katoomba or
Leura – where the Great Western Highway, the main escape route,
could be a traffic jam in the best of conditions – Mr Fitzsimmons
said those strategies were being worked out.
On
Sunday, an emergency warning was placed over the
37,000-square-hectare State Mine fire, which started on Defence land
near Lithgow. An investigation is yet to determine whether it was
ignited by explosives training.
Mr
Fitzsimmons said light rain expected on Tuesday would be
“inconsequential” and any marginal improvement in the extreme
weather that triggered the initial disaster last Thursday would be
“academic” – now that fires were burning over such vast
terrain.
“When
you overlay that fire weather forecast across [the Lithgow fire] …
and an active fire edge of more than 300 kilometres, and you couple
that with a fire only several kilometres to the south near
Blackheath, and indeed a fire where we've seen so much devastation
already down towards Springwood and Winmalee, we've got what would be
unparalleled in terms of risk and exposure for the Blue Mountains and
Hawkesbury communities throughout this week.”
Meanwhile in New Zealand -
Firefighters
battling North Island blazes
20
October, 2013
Firefighters
in the top half of the North Island have been battling a series of
fires throughout the day.
The
first started at 1.45pm on Sunday at Mitimiti, south of Kaitaia,
where three helicopters and three fire engines have been working to
put out a blaze.
The
fire service says the fire has covered 50 hectares so far.
A
second blaze began in scrub at Paengaroa in the Western Bay of Plenty
about 2.20pm and firefighters have been trying to contain it.
Shortly
before 4pm, a fire started on Shelley Beach Road in Rodney in
Auckland and a helicopter has been helping efforts to keep it under
control.
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