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10,000 People Left Without Power As Bushfires Flare In South Australia

More than 100 schools have been closed and residents in high risk regions are poised to evacuate.
NSW Rural Fire Service crews fight a fire as it burns close to property on Wheelbarrow Ridge Road at Colo Heights, north west of Sydney on November 19, 2019.
REUTERS
NSW Rural Fire Service crews fight a fire as it burns close to property on Wheelbarrow Ridge Road at Colo Heights, north west of Sydney on November 19, 2019.

Electricity firms cut off power to thousands of people, more than 100 schools were closed and residents in high risk regions were poised to evacuate on Wednesday as Australia’s devastating bushfires opened up a new front.

Australia has been battling wildfires across a number of areas for several days, endangering thousands of people in many communities. Blazes so far this month have claimed at least four lives, burnt about 2.5 million acres of farmland and bush and destroyed more than 300 homes.

On Wednesday, a fresh battle line was drawn as 50 fires sprung up in South Australia, where officials lifted the fire danger warning to “catastrophic” as temperatures passed 42 degrees Celsius.

A catastrophic warning means that should a fire start, it will not be possible for firefighters to control it, given the weather conditions.

“From sunrise until well past midnight, this state is going to experience very difficult fire conditions,” Brenton Eden, assistant chief officer at the South Australian Country Fire Service, told ABC radio.

As some of fires approached electricity transmission lines, provider SA Power Networks cut power to around 10,000 customers.

“With fire conditions expected to continue well into this evening, be prepared for a potentially extended outage before it is safe to restore power supply,” the company tweeted.

With strong winds stoking blazes, authorities put residents near four of the fires on high alert to flee should they spread rapidly.

“This is the worst of the weather from a fire behaviour point that we will have seen,” Eden told reporters in Adelaide, the state capital.

Australia is prone to bushfires in its dry, hot summers, but the recent series of fierce blazes have been sparked early, in the southern spring, after a three-year drought that has left much of the country tinder-dry.

While the immediate threat was in the south on Wednesday, firefighters continued to battle around 100 fires that have been . burning for several days across Australia’s east coast.

Sydney was covered with thick smoke cloud for the second day running. Health officials on Tuesday warned people in the harbour city to stay inside as the smoke reached hazardous levels.

Reporting by Colin Packham (Reuters).

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