This is what every fire season could soon look like

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JANE DERIJCKE SORTS THROUGH HER BURNT POSSESSIONS IN HASTINGS, VICTORIA, AFTER A WILDFIRE DESTROYED HER HOME. Mike Keating/Newspix/Rex Features via AP Australian fire crews are battling some


of the worst wildfires the state of South Australia has seen in decades. The South Australian Country Fire Service, the agency in charge of response, says 22 firefighters have been injured


so far. The service says the conditions over the weekend are rivaled only by those experienced during the notorious “Ash Wednesday” fires of 1983, which killed 75 people. The South


Australian blazes, centered in the Adelaide Hills that surround the state capital, began last Friday. Since then, the fires have consumed more than 46 square miles, and destroyed or damaged


26 homes, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. While residents have begun the tortuous process of picking through the rubble of burnt-out houses, the battle across southern


Australia, including in the neighboring state of Victoria, is far from over. On Monday, roughly 700 firefighters took advantage of relatively cooler temperatures—they are currently battling


fires into the night. But conditions are expected to worsen on Tuesday and Wednesday, with temperatures likely to soar above 100 degrees Fahrenheit. The fires have reignited the country’s


ongoing debate about how best to tackle climate change, which is helping fuel an ever-increasing number of wildfires, and lengthening Australia’s fire seasons. “Every year we are going to


face these extreme weather events, which are going to cost lives and infrastructure, and enough is enough,” said Christine Milne, the leader of the country’s Greens party. Here are some


photos from this weekend: COLUMNS OF SMOKE RISE FROM THE ADELAIDE HILLS IN THIS PHOTO TAKEN ON JANUARY 2. MORE THAN 30 HOMES ARE ALREADY FEARED DESTROYED. Hewitt Wang/Xinhua/ZUMA FIREFIGHTER


LUKAS LANE-GELDMACHER RESCUES A DOG FROM THE TEA TREE GULLY BOARDING KENNEL AND CATTERY DURING THE ADELAIDE HILLS FIRE ON JANUARY 3. Dylan Coker/Newspix/Rex Features via AP FIRE CREWS


BATTLE A WILDFIRE IN KERSBROOK, OUTSIDE ADELAIDE, THE CAPITAL OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA. Campbell Brodie/Newspix/Rex Features via AP SOUTH AUSTRALIA WASN’T THE ONLY STATE IMPACTED BY FIRES. HERE,


JOHN GAYLOR STANDS AMID THE WRECKAGE OF HIS FIREWOOD BUSINESS IN HASTINGS, VICTORIA. Mike Keating/Newspix/Rex Features via AP TREES BLACKENED BY THIS WEEKEND’S FIRES IN THE ADELAIDE HILLS.


Hewitt Wang/Xinhua/ZUMA This spectacular and frightening photo, taken by Ben Goode, and shared on his Facebook page, Earth Art Photography: And finally, these firefighters have a pointed


message for the Australian prime minister, Tony Abbott, who is known for scrapping the nation’s cap-and-trade program, and gutting various government agencies tasked with fighting climate


change: > Firies would rather Abbott fight climate change….personally there > are so many things I would rather he do #auspol > pic.twitter.com/o2b70WbcfL >  > — Sally McManus


 (@sallymcmanus) January 5, 2015