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Australians Brace For Flames As 'Frighteningly Quick' Bushfires Advance Toward Sydney

Boats are pulled ashore as smoke and bushfires rage behind Australia's Lake Conjola on Thursday. Thousands of tourists fled the country's fire-ravaged eastern coast this week ahead of worsening conditions.
Robert Oerlemans
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AP
Boats are pulled ashore as smoke and bushfires rage behind Australia's Lake Conjola on Thursday. Thousands of tourists fled the country's fire-ravaged eastern coast this week ahead of worsening conditions.

Updated at 10:50 p.m. ET

Prime Minister Scott Morrison is calling up 3,000 reservistsfor operations related to the massive bushfires in eastern Australia that have forced mass evacuations and killed at least 11 people since Monday.

Record heat has contributed to the ferocity of blazes. Flames now threaten the outskirts of the country's largest city, Sydney.

Authorities are warning of worsening conditions over the weekend. The rural fire service deputy commissioner for New South Wales, Rob Rogers, has warned of the "frighteningly quick" advance of the blazes.

"With the fuel loads that we've got and the drought conditions and the current weather conditions that we have, frankly, we can't put these large fires out," Mick Holton, president of the Volunteer Fire Fighters Association, told NPR's Morning Edition.

A firefighter sprays foam retardant on a back burn ahead of a fire front in the New South Wales town of Jerrawangala on New Year's Day.
Peter Parks / AFP via Getty Images
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AFP via Getty Images
A firefighter sprays foam retardant on a back burn ahead of a fire front in the New South Wales town of Jerrawangala on New Year's Day.

Holton says firefighters are at the mercy of changing weather conditions.

"We're paying the price for probably lack of fuel management," he added.

Evacuees walk to the beach at Mallacoota in Victoria to board vessels and be ferried out.
POIS Helen Frank / Australian Defence Force
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Australian Defence Force
Evacuees walk to the beach at Mallacoota in Victoria to board vessels and be ferried out.
Crews monitor fires and begin back burns between the towns of Orbost and Lakes Entrance in East Gippsland, east of Melbourne, on Thursday.
Darrian Traynor / Getty Images
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Getty Images
Crews monitor fires and begin back burns between the towns of Orbost and Lakes Entrance in East Gippsland, east of Melbourne, on Thursday.
A view of fire damage on Friday in Sarsfield, east of Melbourne. Thousands of people have been stranded in the remote coastal town following fires across East Gippsland.
Darrian Traynor / Getty Images
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Getty Images
A view of fire damage on Friday in Sarsfield, east of Melbourne. Thousands of people have been stranded in the remote coastal town following fires across East Gippsland.

Forecasters from Australia's Bureau of Meteorology expect the weather on Saturday to intensify the fire dangers in New South Wales and Victoria.

In a Saturday morning local time update, one forecaster said, "The changes arriving later in the day today, in comparison to New Year's Eve, [are] giving more time for those strong" winds to affect the fire regions.

Temperatures are expected to reach into the low- to mid-40 degrees Celsius in some parts of the two states. That's between 104 and 114 degrees Fahrenheit.

HMAS Choules, aiding in the evacuations, is seen off the coast of Mallacoota, Victoria.
POIS Helen Frank / Australian Defence Force
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Australian Defence Force
HMAS Choules, aiding in the evacuations, is seen off the coast of Mallacoota, Victoria.
Evacuees from Mallacoota are transported by landing craft to MV Sycamore.
LSIS Shane Cameron / Australian Defence Force
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Australian Defence Force
Evacuees from Mallacoota are transported by landing craft to MV Sycamore.

The warnings come after two people were killed Saturday in a blaze that devastated a large swath of Kangaroo Island, police toldthe Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

ABC reports "up to 150,000 hectares — about a quarter of the island — has been burnt and authorities are warning of significant property losses."

Bushfires are seen between the towns of Orbost and Lakes Entrance in East Gippsland on Thursday. HMAS Choules evacuated thousands of people stranded in the remote coastal town of Mallacoota.
Darrian Traynor / Getty Images
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Getty Images
Bushfires are seen between the towns of Orbost and Lakes Entrance in East Gippsland on Thursday. HMAS Choules evacuated thousands of people stranded in the remote coastal town of Mallacoota.
A helicopter drops water on a bushfire outside of Batemans Bay in New South Wales on Thursday.
Peter Parks / AFP via Getty Images
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AFP via Getty Images
A helicopter drops water on a bushfire outside of Batemans Bay in New South Wales on Thursday.
Smoke rises from a massive bushfire in this image released Thursday by the Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning in Gippsland, Victoria.
DELWP Gippsland / AP
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AP
Smoke rises from a massive bushfire in this image released Thursday by the Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning in Gippsland, Victoria.

"Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Graham Ashton said the number of people missing now stood at 21, seven fewer than the number unaccounted for 24 hours earlier," ABC reported.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Vanessa Romo
Vanessa Romo is a reporter for NPR's News Desk. She covers breaking news on a wide range of topics, weighing in daily on everything from immigration and the treatment of migrant children, to a war-crimes trial where a witness claimed he was the actual killer, to an alleged sex cult. She has also covered the occasional cat-clinging-to-the-hood-of-a-car story.