Nowra,
Rain
fell across parts of bushfire-ravaged eastern Australia on Thursday and
more wet weather was forecast, giving some relief following months of
catastrophic blazes fuelled by climate change.
The
fires, unprecedented for Australia in terms of duration and intensity,
have claimed 28 lives and killed an estimated billion animals.
Sustained hot weather and only very rare periods of light rain in the affected areas have deepened the crisis.
So authorities had been looking forward to this week's rain hoping it would help contain or even extinguish some fires.
In
the state of New South Wales, where many of the worst fires have burnt,
there were "good falls" on some blazes early Thursday, the local
meteorology bureau reported.
"Relief is here for a number of firefighters
working across NSW," the state's Rural Fire Service said in a social
media post accompanying video footage of rain falling in a burning
forest.
"Although this rain won't extinguish all fires, it will certainly go a long way towards containment."
Before the rains, there were 30 blazes burning out of control in New South Wales.
Smoke
from bushfires had also choked the southern city of Melbourne from
Monday to Wednesday, disrupting the build-up to next week's Australian
Open tennis tournament.
However
thunderstorms late on Wednesday cleared the smoke, with the wet weather
then moving east towards fires in the southern state of Victoria.
"Storms have improved air quality in most parts of the state," the Victorian Environment Protection Agency said
More
rain was also forecast on Friday and the weekend which, if it does
occur, would be the most sustained period of wet weather since the
crisis began in September last year.
"This
will be all of our Christmas, birthday, engagement, anniversary,
wedding and graduation presents rolled into one. Fingers crossed," the
New South Wales Rural Fire Service said early this week in reference to
the forecast wet weather.
The fires
have destroyed more than 2,000 homes and burnt 10 million hectares (25
million acres) of land -- an area larger than South Korea or Portugal.
Australia endures bushfires every year but they started much earlier than normal last year and have lasted far longer.
Forests
and farming land were already extremely dry due to a prolonged drought,
providing the foundations for the fire crisis when extreme hot weather
hit well before the southern summer.
Australia
experienced its driest and hottest year on record in 2019, with its
highest average maximum temperature of 41.9 degrees Celsius (107.4
degrees Fahrenheit) recorded in mid-December.
Scientists say the bushfires are the type of extreme disaster the world can expect more of as global warming intensifies.
The past decade was the hottest on record globally, the United Nations said on Wednesday.
"What's
happening is persistent, not a fluke due to some weather phenomenon,"
said Gavin Schmidt, director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space
Studies, which provided one of the datasets for the UN report.
"We know that the long-term trends are being driven by the increasing levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere."
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