“Our job is to help people tomorrow. We might not be able to. That’s difficult to say, but it’s real.”
With that line, the CFA’s Greg Murphy - deputy incident controller at the enormous, emergency-level Longwood fire - laid out the brutal reality facing Victoria on Friday.
Murphy, the deputy incident controller for the Longwood fire, addressed a crowd of locals and evacuees in Seymour this evening, ahead of the catastrophic fire danger forecast.
Read more of our coverage here and here.
Here’s what else we learned tonight.
At Longwood, more than 400 firefighters are tackling a bushfire that has so far burnt through 27,000 hectares and prompted many ‘Leave Now’ emergency warnings from authorities.
This evening, deputy incident controller Greg Murphy addressed evacuees and townsfolk in Seymour. He said the blaze wasn’t under control, and with tomorrow’s catastrophic fire conditions forecast for the area, they had “no chance” of changing that soon.
“Our job is to help people. Tomorrow, we might not be able to. That’s difficult to say, but it’s real.”
At least two homes have been lost in Longwood, we are chasing details from the State Control Centre.
The Hume Freeway remains closed.
Further north, emergency warnings remain in place for the fire in Mount Lawson State Park. That fire which started earlier this week has burned through 9000 hectares. People in towns including Cudgewa and Burrowye are being urged to leave immediately, while settlements as far south as Tallangatta and Mitta Mitta should stay informed.
Around 20 fires started this evening in East Gippsland - including Mallacoota - and the Alpine National Park, believed to be the result of dry lightning strikes.
Looking ahead to Friday:
- There is a total fire ban for every part of Victoria, and the Wimmera, South West, Northern Country and North Central fire district areas are facing catastrophic fire danger. People are being urged to leave bushfire risk areas, because if a fire starts and takes hold, lives are likely to be lost.
- All national parks in Catastrophic Fire Danger areas will be closed to visitors on Friday - this includes the Grampians, Otways, parts of the Murray and Goulburn Rivers, and many attractions on the Great Ocean Road. This also means the Mountain To Surf race near Lorne will not go ahead.
- V-Line has cancelled all train services on the nine train lines that run through the areas with catastrophic ratings. There will be no replacement bus services.
- At least 450 schools and kindergartens providing holiday programs will also close as authorities pleaded for people to leave.
- Dozens of firefighters from New South Wales will assist Victorian crews in battling blazes during Friday’s catastrophic conditions.
Thank you for reading our live blog of the heatwave and fires across Victoria. Our coverage has now concluded for today. We will resume rolling coverage of the extreme weather tomorrow morning.