Toronto Star

Edmonton fire chief sees warning in Australia

- BOB WEBER

EDMONTON— In a few weeks, Ken Block will hang up his uniform as head of Edmonton Fire Rescue and head Down Under to assume command of 5,000 firefighte­rs in Australia.

“I’m really looking forward to getting over there,” the fire chief said in an interview this week.

Block is to lead a newly created force looking after a large swath of southern Australia that includes both Melbourne and the rural areas around it.

The state of Victoria, which includes the region where Block will serve, has not been spared the bush fires ravaging Australia. Dozens of communitie­s have been warned to prepare for a fire sweeping through their area.

Recent rain has helped contain the burns, but it hasn’t been enough to extinguish them.

Every state and territory in Australia has experience­d fires this season. The biggest are burning along stretches of the eastern and southern coast, where most of the population lives.

More than two dozen people have been killed, more than 10 million hectares have been scorched and thousands of homes have been destroyed.

About 70 Canadian firefighte­rs are helping Australian crews working to push back the flames.

Forest scientists say climate change contribute­s to the problem by extending the fire season and increasing the number of hot, dry, windy days that encourage fires to ignite and spread.

The role of climate change in the fires remains a subject of debate in Australia. But Block suggests there’s little doubt that wildfire is going to be a bigger part of everyone’s lives.

“I believe it is. (Australian­s) are living through that right now.” For Block, the real issue is adaptation. “The climate is what it is. We may not be getting as much precipitat­ion, or the average temperatur­es may be increasing. Whatever it is that’s contributi­ng to the increasing risk, how do we mitigate that with the way we interact ... How do we build?”

Melbourne is growing by 20,000 people a year, he said. That pushes more and more residents out into wildfire country or what Block calls the “rural-urban interface.”

“The urban area is reaching out into the rural areas. People need to appreciate the increased risk.” That’s happening in Alberta, too. Although the province hasn’t yet experience­d fires on the scale of Australia’s, blazes in Fort McMurray and Slave Lake have shown what’s possible, Block said.

“There’s a lot of similariti­es. The bush fires, small land fires, is one of them. We are experienci­ng more wildfires in this part of the world.

“We’ve got to get our head around how do we better prepare and plan for emergencie­s of that magnitude to protect the public, protect the environmen­t.”

 ?? JASON FRANSON THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A helicopter battles a wildfire in Fort McMurray, Alta., in 2016. Edmonton’s fire chief expects such blazes to be increasing­ly common in the province.
JASON FRANSON THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO A helicopter battles a wildfire in Fort McMurray, Alta., in 2016. Edmonton’s fire chief expects such blazes to be increasing­ly common in the province.

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