As Australia burns in deadly fires, its people are choking

AFP
Australian bushfires have caused unprecedented pollution in Sydney and along the country's east coast.
AFP
As Australia burns in deadly fires, its people are choking
Reuters

A ferry makes its way from Taronga Zoo to Circular Quay, with the CBD skyline barely visible in the background through smoke haze from bushfires in Sydney, Australia, on Thursday. 

Australian bushfires have caused unprecedented pollution in Sydney and along the country’s east coast, officials said on Thursday, with smoke and dust burning residents’ eyes and prompting a spike in respiratory complaints.

Hundreds of bushfires have burned out of control since September up and down the eastern seaboard, blanketing cities from Sydney to Brisbane in smoke for weeks on end.

The extent of the crisis was made clear on Thursday, with the New South Wales department of environment declaring bushfires and dust had caused “some of the highest air pollution ever seen” in Australia.

The region “has experienced other periods of poor air quality that lasted several weeks, including the 1994 Sydney bushfires and the Black Christmas bushfires of December 2001 to January 2002,” a spokeswoman said.

“This event, however, is the longest and the most widespread in our records.”

New South Wales Rural Fire Service said over a dozen fires were burning near Sydney on Thursday, including three that carried an emergency warning.For three weeks, the city has seen almost daily air quality warnings.

Bushfires are common in Australia but scientists say this year’s season has come earlier and with more intensity due to a prolonged drought fuelled by climate change.

New South Wales health officials said more people with asthma were turning up at hospitals and ambulance call-outs for breathing problems were up 24 percent in the week to December 1.

Meanwhile, tourists and residents took measures to combat the smoke, buying facemasks and staying indoors as much as possible.

On Thursday, Sydney’s air quality index registered fine particulate pollution — small enough to penetrate deep inside the lungs — at over 160 parts per million, far above levels considered to be safe.


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