Sydney choked by hazardous haze from Australia bush fires

AUSTRALIA. Thick smoke from wildfires shroud the Opera House in Sydney, Australia, Tuesday, December 10. Hot dry conditions have brought an early start to the fire season. (AP)
AUSTRALIA. Thick smoke from wildfires shroud the Opera House in Sydney, Australia, Tuesday, December 10. Hot dry conditions have brought an early start to the fire season. (AP)



SYDNEY -- Wildfires engulfed the Australian city of Sydney Tuesday, December 10, in haze so thick that in some places it was 11 times worse than the level considered “hazardous," and was apt to trigger fire alarms.

The city canceled ferries and some offices in the downtown area were evacuated.

Local health officials advised people to stay indoors as much as possible and those with heart and lung problems were told to avoid all outdoor activity.

"The smoke here in Sydney is extremely bad today. It is some of the worst air quality we've seen," Richard Broome of New South Wales (NSW) Health told reporters.

“We are just urging people once again to take these (conditions) seriously,” Broome said.

Ambulances have been answering dozens of respiratory-related calls a day, said the head of NSW Ambulance, Brent Armitage.

Sydney Trains warned that fire alarms at train stations might be set off by the thick smoke drifting into the city from fires ringing Sydney.

The regional environmental department said the air quality index (AQI) in some parts of the city was more than 11 times the 200 reading considered hazardous.

Given the dire air quality, workers should not be forced to toil on outdoor job sites while the haze persists, said Unions NSW's assistant secretary, Thomas Costa.

"Toxicity is very, very high," Costa said.

Winds were expected that could clear the air but also fan the brush fires, weather forecasts showed. (AP)

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