Home Australian News Extreme fire danger risk for anywhere west of the Hume Highway

Extreme fire danger risk for anywhere west of the Hume Highway

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Extreme fire danger risk for anywhere west of the Hume Highway

“We are expecting temperatures around 40 [degrees] and the high 30s everywhere from the coast up to and across to the central region. So basically, anything west of the Hume would be areas of concern for the state, including our central regions, which does go into parts of Melbourne,” Symes said.

The Bureau of Meteorology is predicting Mildura will reach a temperature of 44 degrees on Wednesday and Swan Hill will hit 42 degrees.

“What we know already is that the indicators are in the extreme range,” Symes said.

“Given the hot weather that we have had in recent weeks, a lot of drying has occurred particularly in the west of the state … We’re expecting not only high temperatures, but also wind is expected.”

Fire chiefs were to meet with the Bureau of Meteorology on Sunday to discuss the dire forecast.

Ballarat incident controller Jon Rofe told The Age the region was expecting temperatures in the mid-30s on Wednesday. Strong north-westerly winds would likely blow through the fireground before a south-westerly wind change late in the afternoon.

“If we’ve got fire running freely in the landscape under the north-westerly, any wind change will cause quite dramatic fire behaviour, right on that change and straight after,” he said.

Crews are now working on creating containment lines back to bare earth around the fire’s edge – which has a perimeter of 150 kilometres – and back-burning in dense bush areas that haven’t been touched by flames and can’t be reached by machinery.

Rofe said the fire had grown during warmer and drier conditions on Saturday afternoon, but milder weather into Sunday meant the fire had not increased substantially in size.

He said it was a priority to allow residents who were cut off from their properties to return home, and small reductions would be made to the watch and act warnings if roads were made safe on Sunday.

Smoke from the fire north of Beaufort, photographed from a helicopter on Saturday.

Smoke from the fire north of Beaufort, photographed from a helicopter on Saturday.Credit: NCA Newswire

About 500 firefighters remain on the ground fighting the fire.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Sunday his government would provide the support Victoria needed to combat the bushfires.

“I say to people: listen to the advice of the authorities. We need to make sure that we watch and act when that advice comes through,” he said.

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