Sydney workers evacuated as smoke triggers alarms at offices, train stations

A thick blanket of smoke has blanketed on Sydney triggering smoke alarms and forcing the cancellation of outdoor events.

Smoke alarms are going off in Sydney office buildings and train stations as the air quality reaches record hazardous levels. 

The city and surrounding suburbs are shrouded in the thick smoke haze from dozens of bushfires burning across NSW. 

That's pushed air quality ratings beyond 2200 in Sydney's east and north-west - 11 times the hazardous level. 

The smoke has made its way inside office buildings, triggering smoke alarms and forcing workers to evacuate, including those at the NSW Rural Fire Service headquarters at Olympic Park and the Sydney Morning Herald in Pyrmont.
Commuters at Wynyard Station reported the smoke alarms were going off, but trains were continuing to run. 

Transport for NSW advised commuters the operation of gates in and out of the station may be affected when an alarm is activated.
Sporting events and Sydney Harbour ferries have also been cancelled. 

The SOLAS Big Boat Challenge was called off with organisers citing safety concerns due to the poor visibility on Sydney Harbour. 

The event, which is a curtain-raiser for the Sydney-Hobart yacht race, was due to start Tuesday morning.

"The smoke from all the fires is just so severe here on the harbour that you just can't see anything, so it's just too dangerous," Sydney to Hobart Race media director Di Pearson told AFP. 

"The vision is just so poor."
While smoke haze has become a familiar sight in Sydney since the unprecedented fires started in November, many Sydney-siders said it was the worst they'd seen. 

"I've never seen Sydney like this before," Lisa Herbertson tweeted. 

Others wondered if these conditions are the "new normal". 

"Coughing in bed, choke on the smoky air. A Manly ferry emerges from the gloom. And a man wears a gas mask on the ferry. And this is a horrible new normal," Andrew Thomas tweeted. 

Former Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher, who is in Australia for a series of solo shows, described Sydney as "spooky as f***" on Twitter. 

Macquarie Park in Sydney's north-west recorded the state's worst air quality rating of 2,214 by 10am. 

Anything above 200 PM2.5, a measure of harmful particulate matter in the air, is considered hazardous.

Temperatures rise

The Bureau of Meteorology says "severe heatwave conditions" will build on Tuesday, bringing temperatures over 40 degrees Celsius to many regions.

Authorities have warned these conditions, combined with the "grotty" smoke pollution, will put stress on vulnerable people in the coming days.
NSW Health environmental health director Dr Richard Broome says Tuesday is likely to be "very hot and very smoky".

"It's going to be putting a lot of stress on vulnerable people, particularly elderly people who have existing heart and lung conditions," he told reporters.

The NSW environment department says visibility across east and southwest Sydney was at a "hazardous" level on Tuesday morning, while air quality was poor in southwest Sydney and hazardous in northwest Sydney.

The haze may cause breathing issues for those with heart or lung disease.

NSW Rural Fire Service Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons says wind speeds on Tuesday won't be as high as previous dangerous bushfire days, but high temperatures and low humidity would cancel this out.

Firefighting crews spent Monday evening back-burning around the Gospers Mountain mega-fire on the Central Coast.
"We're going to see this hot, dominant air mass moving across into NSW, but particularly hot conditions with really dry air are going to result in some fairly widespread severe fire danger ratings," Mr Fitzsimmons told the Seven Network.

"We're quite concerned about the potential for fire danger and fire spread today.

"We are going to see a vigorous cold front move through the state and particularly start moving through places like Sydney in the early afternoon, up through the Hunter a little later in the afternoon, into the evening."
NSW Rural Fire fighters establish a backburn  in Mangrove Mountain, New South Wales.
NSW Rural Fire fighters establish a backburn in Mangrove Mountain, New South Wales. Source: AAP
Mr Fitzsimmons said the southerly cold front could ramp up fires surrounding Sydney by dramatically changing wind direction.

The RFS were conducting critical operations to protect homes, he said.

Nine regions are under total fire bans on Tuesday, including greater Sydney, greater Hunter and Illawarra-Shoalhaven. Severe fire danger is forecast for seven regions, including the aforementioned trio.

There were almost 85 fires burning across NSW on Monday evening with 37 of those out of control and more than 2000 firefighters in the field.
NSW Fire and Rescue officers hoses down his truck as his crew battle a bushfire encroaching on properties near Termeil on the Princes Highway.
NSW Fire and Rescue officers hoses down his truck as his crew battle a bushfire encroaching on properties near Termeil on the Princes Highway. Source: AAP
"The more up to date you can be and the more you can act in accordance with your plan or any advice or directions given by fire authorities, it could improve the prospects of survivability not just your family but also your home, your property, your livelihood," Mr Fitzsimmons said.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian says the drought-stricken state could be in for a "horror summer", while Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Tuesday encouraged Australians to follow the instructions of fire authorities.

"I can reassure everyone that the nationally-coordinated effort and the specific state efforts leading the response in each of their jurisdictions has been incredibly professionally deployed," Mr Morrison told reporters.

He said the defence force was also assisting state fire authorities and thanked American, Canadian and Kiwi firefighters assisting in Australia.


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5 min read
Published 10 December 2019 5:32am
Updated 10 December 2019 3:42pm
By SBS News
Source: SBS



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