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Tasmanian bushfire season pushes later due to La Niña, with conditions primed for catastrophe

A fire crew is dwarfed by a column of fire near Tullah over the weekend. (Supplied: Tasmania Fire Service)

The shocking image of a fire column, described as "the finger of the beast", captured during a bushfire in Tasmania over the weekend has served as a reminder the island is in peak fire season — with one expert saying every summer without a catastrophe is a "blessing".

The danger in Tullah, in Tasmania's north-west, as of Monday afternoon had largely passed, but not before evacuation orders were in place for the township on Saturday.

As of Monday, fires were still burning in several locations.

And while the La Niña conditions affecting Tasmania have made for a later start to the bushfire season, one expert warns the "green drought" — new growth from rain events in a drying-out landscape — was to be ignored at the state's peril.

A typical bushfire season in Tasmania can run from October through to March, with fire authorities warning "bushfires that are difficult to control can occur at any time during that period".

The Tullah fires, in an area known as typically being described by a fire ecologist as "wet forest", could be considered the first major fire event of the 2021/2022 Tasmanian fire season.

A large plume of smoke seen from a fire burning in southern Tasmania, in January 2019. (Supplied: Tasmania Fire Service)

David Bowman, professor of pyrogeography and fire science at the University of Tasmania, said the Tullah fire happened in an area "primed to burn".

"The landscape has been saturated because of La Niña and there has been a lot of growth and it's green, but underneath in the subsoil it's dry. The forests are already struggling, particularly in western Tasmania."

Professor Bowman said the rains brought by La Niña, combined with the "long term drying trend" across the state, meant Tasmania was "one heatwave away from a very dangerous fire situation".

Fire crews employ a water-bombing helicopter during the southern Tasmanian bushfires of 2019. (Instagram: Fire Rescue Tasmania)

In a statement, the Bureau of Meteorology confirmed La Niña had played its part as predicted.

"A La Niña event is currently underway and this tends to lead to wetter and more humid conditions for most of south-east Australia in late winter and spring," the BOM said.

"All of Tasmania apart from just the south-west coast was wetter than average in spring, and significantly so in the south-east.

"However, December was drier than average for all of Tasmania, suggesting that fuels have now started to dry out."

That was very concerning, according to Professor Bowman, and placed Tasmania on a "deeply worrying trajectory".

"We've had floods associated with the easterly weather, La Nina, which puts water into landscape, but it is much drier than people realise. We have scary quantities of grass in the landscape," he said.

Fire burns in Hobart's Queens Domain in 2013. (@Apalmer723)

Tasmania Fire Service acting deputy chief Jeffrey Harper said the bushfire that threatened Tullah over the weekend "should serve as a reminder for all bushfire prone communities in Tasmania that while we don't know exactly where bushfires will occur, we do know they will happen, and everyone needs to be prepared".

He described the bushfire activity Tasmania had seen so far as being "typical of a normal bushfire season where we would expect three to four major bushfires, with drying conditions throughout January".

"The high-risk period is traditionally late mid-January through to mid-February when the fine fuels dry out and increase the risk of grass fires.

Deputy Chief Harper said Tasmania Fire Service "continually reminds the community of the potential for bushfires over summer and the dangers of complacency".

Looking up one of Hobart's main streets, during the height of the 1967 bushfires. (Supplied: Jane Maareveen)

Despite Tasmania's history with bushfires — the worst being the 1967 disaster — some people continued to put themselves in danger, Professor Bowman said.

"The greater Hobart-area, this is a very seriously dangerous landscape. Every summer we get through is a blessing, but every summer we get through where we haven't done the work is a lost opportunity," he said.

"My concern is we are going to run out of summers and then we are going to see something very, very ugly."

He pointed to the United States as a lesson for Tasmania, in that throwing money at firefighting appliances was not the single answer.

"They built these massive firefighting armies, with air forces, but climate change is defeating them. They just don't have that surge capacity.

"Climate change is changing the rules of the way fires are working, seasons are longer, the idea that we can share resources from the northern hemisphere, that's out the window because the fire seasons are merging.

"We are seeing fires in northern California, in environments that don't normally burn, in winter, because of the drying out of the landscape. The logs are dried out, the moss beds are dried out, the creeks are low."

A blaze takes hold in bushland in the Central Plateau, in February 2019. (Meander Fire Brigade: Glen Boxhall )

Professor Bowman said along with spending on modern means of firefighting, being better prepared ahead of emergencies was critical.

Many dwellings in and around Hobart are nestled deep in forested areas. (ABC News)

"There is no question rapid attack aircraft, better modelling, surveillance and satellites, are all part of the toolbox, but we know from the American experience that you can have the biggest firefighting armies in the world and climate change will still defeat them," he said.

"We have to do two things well; we have to have good firefighting capabilities, but also build that capacity with local communities, to prepare their properties and settlements, to prepare land around their homes and to manage fuels. This is just what we have to do now."

Sixty-four people died in the February 1967 fires, with another 900 injured and over 1,000 buildings lost. It is estimated thousands of animals were killed. (ABC Archives)

Professor Bowman said while burning off and fuel reduction were being done, there needed to be more — a lot more.

He said the "good messages" by the fire services and other agencies about prevention and preparation could still be "misunderstood by people", or they don't have the means to act on them.

"Once you start accumulating multiple vulnerabilities in the landscape, plus you've got people in blissful denial, because it hasn't happened to them, they don't know what happened in 1967, they are prepared to take these incredible risks. When you bolt all of that together you end up with this very dangerous setting," he said.

"I'm not trying to cry wolf, but the tempo is ramping up and we have to find a means, politically and with policy.

An aerial view of destruction caused by the Dunalley bushfire in 2013. (ABC News)

In a statement, Tasmania Parks and Wildlife Service (PWS) said its strategy for bushfires "remains focused on early detection and rapid response to fires". 
 
"Rapid attack teams from the PWS are pre-positioned on days of higher fire danger in areas of Tasmania that have higher risk. These teams are made of specialised remote area firefighters who are trained to respond quickly to any new fires.

"Campfire restrictions are in place for the PWS eastern reserve network and will remain in place until the general period of elevated fire danger is over."

PWS said "climate drivers" had meant "drier conditions than normal in western Tasmania and this is expected to continue until mid-to-late autumn".

Information about fire safety and preparation can be found on the Tasmania Fire Service website.

More information about campfire restrictions and the latest alerts can be found on the Parks and Wildlife Service website.

The ABC is Australia's emergency broadcaster and provides updates across its services.

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