MarketBushfires in Victoria
Company Profile

Bushfires in Victoria

The state of Victoria in Australia has had a long history of catastrophic bushfires.

By number of fires
Lightning - 26% • Deliberate - 25% • Agricultural - 16% • Campfire - 10% • Cigarettes/Matches - 7% • Unknown Causes - 6% == By area burnt ==
By area burnt
Lightning - 46% • Public Utilities - 14% • Deliberate - 14% • Misc - 9% • Agricultural - 7% • Planned burn escapes - 5% • Unknown Causes - 3% • Machinery/Exhaust - 2% • Campfire - 1% • Cigarettes/Matches - less than 1% ==Major Victorian Bushfires==
Major Victorian Bushfires
, near Anglers Rest, Gippsland, after the 2003 fires Most extensive fires1851 - 6 February "Black Thursday" (5 million hectares) • 1938-39 - December - January "Black Friday" (2 million hectares) • 2020 - 3 January "2019–20 Australian bushfire season" (1.5+ million hectares) • 2003 - January - March "2003 Eastern Victorian alpine bushfires" (1.3 million hectares) • 2006-07 - 1 December - 6 February "Eastern Victoria Great Divide bushfires" (1.2 -1.3 million hectares) • 1944 - January - February (1 million hectares) • 1983 - 16 February "Ash Wednesday" (510,000 hectares) • 2009 - 7 February "Black Saturday" (450,000 hectares) • 1965 - Gippsland (300,000 hectares) • 1898 - 1 February "Red Tuesday" (260,000 hectares) Deadliest fires2009 - 7 February - March "Black Saturday" (173 deaths) • 1939 - December - January "Black Friday" (71 deaths) • 1926 - 14 February - March "Black Sunday" (60 deaths) • 1944 - December - February (51 deaths) • 1983 - 16 February "Ash Wednesday" (47 in Victoria) • 1962 - 14–16 January (33 deaths) • 1969 - 8 January (23 deaths) • 1942 - Western Victoria (20 deaths) • 1905 - 1 December (12 deaths) • 1898 - 1 February "Red Tuesday" (12 deaths) • 1851 - 6 February "Black Thursday" (12 deaths) • 1943 - 22 December (10 deaths) • 1952 - January - March, Central Victoria (10 deaths) • 1977 - 12 February, Western Victoria (8 deaths) • 1965 - 17 January (7 deaths) Longwood, Northern Victoria • 1998 - 2 December (5 deaths) Linton, Western Victoria • 1985 - 14 January (3 deaths) Avoca, Central Victoria • 1997 - 21 January (3 deaths) Dandenong Ranges ==See also==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com