Zürcher Nachrichten - What to know about Chile's voracious wildfires

EUR -
AED 4.301864
AFN 77.304586
ALL 96.517737
AMD 446.80677
ANG 2.097054
AOA 1074.059663
ARS 1697.492292
AUD 1.771626
AWG 2.111223
AZN 1.995818
BAM 1.956176
BBD 2.359253
BDT 143.253857
BGN 1.9558
BHD 0.441594
BIF 3466.974186
BMD 1.171275
BND 1.514291
BOB 8.094348
BRL 6.492265
BSD 1.171325
BTN 104.952479
BWP 16.476166
BYN 3.442662
BYR 22956.99123
BZD 2.355762
CAD 1.616588
CDF 2996.711839
CHF 0.931486
CLF 0.027176
CLP 1066.099144
CNY 8.24689
CNH 8.239059
COP 4470.756915
CRC 584.997425
CUC 1.171275
CUP 31.038789
CVE 110.627391
CZK 24.343828
DJF 208.159465
DKK 7.472037
DOP 73.326368
DZD 151.886312
EGP 55.741571
ERN 17.569126
ETB 181.669299
FJD 2.678125
FKP 0.874912
GBP 0.875669
GEL 3.144921
GGP 0.874912
GHS 13.446695
GIP 0.874912
GMD 85.503496
GNF 10173.695611
GTQ 8.975495
GYD 245.060812
HKD 9.114219
HNL 30.933829
HRK 7.533295
HTG 153.579511
HUF 386.389007
IDR 19560.293548
ILS 3.756338
IMP 0.874912
INR 104.913338
IQD 1534.370332
IRR 49310.680555
ISK 147.124312
JEP 0.874912
JMD 187.421213
JOD 0.83048
JPY 184.659132
KES 150.981808
KGS 102.428454
KHR 4697.984687
KMF 491.935937
KPW 1054.130511
KRW 1728.802402
KWD 0.359828
KYD 0.976188
KZT 606.160949
LAK 25358.105517
LBP 104887.682278
LKR 362.660397
LRD 207.608952
LSL 19.631017
LTL 3.458471
LVL 0.708493
LYD 6.348757
MAD 10.723069
MDL 19.830303
MGA 5300.020065
MKD 61.554215
MMK 2459.480707
MNT 4159.677582
MOP 9.388163
MRU 46.546915
MUR 54.054787
MVR 18.096643
MWK 2034.505188
MXN 21.115255
MYR 4.775334
MZN 74.848844
NAD 19.631012
NGN 1710.249437
NIO 42.990155
NOK 11.871346
NPR 167.923966
NZD 2.033866
OMR 0.450354
PAB 1.17128
PEN 3.942557
PGK 4.986163
PHP 68.630907
PKR 328.312735
PLN 4.205094
PYG 7858.20806
QAR 4.264657
RON 5.088141
RSD 117.378503
RUB 94.290908
RWF 1705.52772
SAR 4.393307
SBD 9.542084
SCR 17.714001
SDG 704.526256
SEK 10.855422
SGD 1.514319
SHP 0.87876
SLE 28.1696
SLL 24561.056721
SOS 669.387988
SRD 45.025575
STD 24243.029004
STN 24.948159
SVC 10.248707
SYP 12950.914092
SZL 19.631002
THB 36.792137
TJS 10.793798
TMT 4.099463
TND 3.414311
TOP 2.82015
TRY 50.133154
TTD 7.950324
TWD 36.907307
TZS 2922.331674
UAH 49.527817
UGX 4189.805079
USD 1.171275
UYU 45.988051
UZS 14078.726645
VES 330.486562
VND 30819.175089
VUV 142.192856
WST 3.267111
XAF 656.057857
XAG 0.017437
XAU 0.00027
XCD 3.16543
XCG 2.111052
XDR 0.814958
XOF 655.332606
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.236178
ZAR 19.647472
ZMK 10542.885293
ZMW 26.501414
ZWL 377.150092
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    80.22

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    23.17

    -0.52%

  • RYCEF

    0.2100

    15.61

    +1.35%

  • RELX

    0.0800

    40.73

    +0.2%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    91.36

    +0.82%

  • GSK

    0.3200

    48.61

    +0.66%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    0.6900

    78.32

    +0.88%

  • BP

    0.6300

    33.94

    +1.86%

  • NGG

    -0.2800

    76.11

    -0.37%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    12.84

    +0.31%

  • BTI

    -0.5900

    56.45

    -1.05%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.25

    -0.13%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13.38

    -0.37%

  • BCC

    -2.9300

    74.77

    -3.92%

  • BCE

    -0.0100

    22.84

    -0.04%

What to know about Chile's voracious wildfires
What to know about Chile's voracious wildfires / Photo: Javier TORRES - AFP

What to know about Chile's voracious wildfires

Coming in the middle of a fierce heatwave, Chile's forest fires engulfed communities with a destructive speed that has stunned the nation.

Text size:

This is what you need to know about the country's deadliest wildfires in recent history:

- Why did fire spread so quickly? -

Summer is in full swing in Chile and a brutal heatwave has seen temperatures reach 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) since last week.

On Friday, several fires broke out in the mountains that overlook the seaside town of Vina del Mar and other locations in the coastal Valparaiso region, some 120 kilometers (74 miles) from the capital Santiago.

Professor Miguel Castillo from the University of Chile's Faculty of Forestry Sciences said the ferocious heat and strong winds formed a "disastrous" combination.

He explained that when vegetation or garbage burns, light, hot air is generated which "lifts ignited particles or embers that travel hundreds of meters, causing satellite" fires.

On the hilly slopes of the coastal region, flames move faster downwind, exacerbating the danger.

On Sunday night some 40 fires remained active in the country.

- Why was the fire so deadly? -

At least 112 people have been killed, and almost one hundred are still missing. President Gabriel Boric has warned the toll could rise "significantly."

The fires engulfed densely populated hilltop communities, mainly in Vina Del Mar -- a popular tourism spot known for beaches and botanical gardens.

In one suburb alone, Villa Independencia, 19 people were killed and thousands of homes razed.

Here, families live crowded in homes built of light materials such as wood.

Flames tore through the narrow streets snaking through the hills, with cars exploding where they stood parked outside homes, according to survivors.

Authorities are investigating why residents did not flee, despite being urged to via messages sent to cellphones.

"Alarms were raised, but the evacuation apparently did not work," said Horacio Gilabert, from the Global Climate Change Center of the Catholic University of Chile.

- What started the fires? -

Boric said authorities were investigating "the possibility that the fires were deliberate."

According to the National Forestry Corporation (Conaf), 99.7 percent of fires in the country are started intentionally or through recklessness.

In the current crisis, "simultaneous outbreaks occurred, and that is totally abnormal," said the professor Castillo.

He said that the deliberate starting of fires was "steadily increasing" despite this drawing prison sentences of up to 20 years. Perpetrators are however rarely caught.

- Is climate change to blame? -

The effects of the El Nino weather phenomenon have become more intense in this part of the world, due to global warming caused by human activity, scientists say.

El Nino raises the temperature of the Pacific Ocean, causing flooding in some areas, and droughts in others.

"A change of just a few degrees in the Tropical Pacific can make the difference between a relatively mild forest fire season and a widespread catastrophe," climatologist Raul Cordero said in a study recently published by the Nature journal.

In the midst of a long drought, Chile experienced an unusual bout of rains last year which led to the growth of scrubland which serves as kindling during wildfires.

- How is Chile tackling the fires? -

Authorities have deployed some 1,400 firefighters and 1,300 soldiers and volunteers to fight the blazes.

They are backed by 31 helicopters and planes equipped to carry water.

Boric, who has increased the budget to fight and prevent fires by 47 percent in his almost two years in office, declared a state of emergency.

A curfew has been imposed in parts of Valparaiso to free up roads for emergency vehicles.

However, the emergency services lack important capabilities, including equipment to fight fires at night.

"As a result, the likelihood that all work done during the day will be lost at night is very high," Michel De L'Herbe, an expert in crisis management, told the radio station Cooperativa.

N.Fischer--NZN