2020-03-01_Australian_Geographic

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1980 1990 2000 2010 2020

5


9


4 5 55


1111


334443 3 44443 3


222


486,030ha

1983
Ash Wednesday
South Australia / Victoria

2400


75


2009
Black Saturday
Victoria

2000


173


400,000ha

2010

2019–20
Bushfi re Season
Nationwide

3000


33


2020

117


million ha


1974 –75
Bushfi re Season
Nationwide

2002
Northern Territory
2002
Northern Territory
Sources: Australian Disaster Resilience
Knowledge Hub; Forest Fire Management
Victoria; Victorian Department of
Sustainability and Environment; Risk
Frontiers Macquarie University; CSIRO;
Australian Bureau of Statistics;
Australian Institute of Criminology

Remote locations
Fires mostly located in
largely uninhabited
parts of Australia.

What makes the
2019–2020 fi res
so destructive?
These fi res were the
fi rst to burn such a large
amount of area close to
human populations, with
multiple fi res burning
simultaneously across the
country, many in areas not
previously prone to fi re.
This resulted in high levels
of destruction on many
levels: fatalities, homes
destroyed and area burnt,
refl ecting a huge cost
to humans and the
natural environment.

Most deaths
Australia's most destructive
fi re by number of fatalities,
with relatively small area burnt

March. April 47

50%
of the last, large,
chlamydia-free population
of koalas is estimated
to have perished in the
Kangaroo Island fi res

211,255


hectares burnt


KANGAROO ISLAND


dwellings
destroyed

vehicles
destroyed

outbuildings
destroyed

89


296


276


Livestock lost


32,000
fire perimeter

612 km


FACT
A total area of
448,685ha burnt
across the state of
of the island South Australia

affected


48%


280


Defence force
personnel
deployed

38 million ha


16
million ha

Fatalities:


2


SOUTH
AUSTRALIA

KANGAROO
ISLAND
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