Home | News | Older Sydneysiders warned to stay inside after hazard reduction burns
Extreme smoke haze blankets the Sydney Basin due to hazard reduction from the RFS. Views looking east from Heathcote where the city skyline peeks its head above the smoke. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Simon Bullard.

Older Sydneysiders warned to stay inside after hazard reduction burns

Older residents have been warned to stay inside today after Sydney woke to a thick blanket of smoke smothering the city after hazard reduction burns were conducted over the weekend.

The smoke is a result of burns that were conducted overnight, drifting and settling over the CBD, according to the NSW Rural Fire Service (RFS).

The haze was so thick it triggered fire alarms across the city, while the NSW Department of Environment issued warnings as the air quality dropped from “poor to worse” across the city’s north-west, central-east and south-west.

Further burns are scheduled on Monday, with Sydney and Central Coast residents being warned they may continue to see and smell the smoke until at least Wednesday.

Concerned locals reported having difficulty sleeping on Sunday night due to the smoke.

The air pollution level in some parts of the nation’s largest city was deemed to be hazardous.

The burns were originally meant to happen on Friday night, but had been postponed until Sunday due to wet weather, according to the RFS.

Woke up at 2am to the smell of smoke in Sydney and can't get back to sleep. This is why. #AirPollution #AQI #woodheaters pic.twitter.com/KeKojfoCn1— Dr Alice McGushin (@AlMcGushin) September 10, 2023

The Health Department is warning anyone with heart or lung disease, older Australians, young children and pregnant women to try to stay inside as they are vulnerable to the smoke.

Residents are being urged to spend time indoors or in air-conditioning and to avoid rigorous outdoor activity.

The burns come as warm spring weather is predicted for Sydney towards the end of the week, with temperatures expected to reach 30 on Friday and Saturday, according to the Bureau Of Meteorology.

“It’s opportunities like we’re seeing today to do this important hazard reduction work; we need to really take these opportunities when they present themselves,” Inspector Ben Shepherd from the RFS told Sunrise.

A hot and dry spring and summer is being forecast for much of Australia, although an “El Nino” weather event that brings heightened risks of bushfires is yet to be formally declared.

Any residents of “at-risk” bushfire areas were being urged to prepare their homes and have a plan in place in the event of a bushfire.

The controlled burns were conducted in the Sutherland Shire, Ku-ring-gai, Hawkesbury, Hornsby and the Central Coast.

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