skippy. wrote on Jan 13
th, 2013 at 9:32am:
I see the morons have still got their heads in the sand, lets hope it's them and theirs that suffer the most from this catastrophe.
Anyone remember the bushfires that surrounded Sydney in 2001-2002?
The Christmas 2001/2002 bushfire emergency officially began on 24 December 2001 with the outbreak of major bushfires in the Cessnock, Blue Mountains, Hawkesbury and Penrith areas. Although the main fire activity ended on 7 January 2002 following heavy overnight rain around Sydney
Total area burnt 753,314 hectares
Houses destroyed 109
Houses damaged 40
Outbuildings destroyed 433
Vehicles destroyed 222
Stock destroyed 7,043
Beehives destroyed 243
Other buildings (commercial, industrial) destroyed 33
http://www.fire.nsw.gov.au/page.php?id=475How about the 1994 fires during which 185 homes were destroyed and 4 lives lost.
1993 - 1994, December - January, North Coast , Hunter and Sydney bushfire
Four dead - two civilians and two fire fighters
800 fires destroyed 800,000 hectares
225 homes and other buildings destroyed and a further 150 damaged
Evacuations - 27,250 people
Firefighters - estimated 20,000
Widespread severe bushfires occurred as extreme weather conditions began to develop along the NSW eastern seaboard from the Queensland border to Batemans Bay in the south, and as far inland as Bathurst.
In excess of 800 fires started between 27 December 1993 and 16 January 1994. Ultimately over 800,000 hectares were burnt. 204 significant bushfires were burning at the height of the crisis. Worst-affected areas were the Hunter, Blue Mountains and Sydney regions.
The most serious losses occurred in fires in the Sydney region, in particular at Jannali and West Como, where about half of the total homes lost in the State were destroyed. Two fire-fighters and two civilians died. One of the civilians was a woman who sheltered in a swimming pool at Jannali, but died of airway burns due to the intense heat of the air she was breathing.
A total of 225 buildings were destroyed and about 150 homes were damaged, varying from minor to serious. Also thousands of small insurance claims were lodged for minor damage (eg smoke damage to soft furnishings) or food spoilage due to lack of refrigeration caused by widespread blackouts. Approximately 27,250 people evacuated - 20,000 fire-fighters deployed from across Australia and New Zealand for over three weeks as hot westerly winds persisted. Some 40 national parks were affected.
http://www.emergency.nsw.gov.au/content.php/598.html