Argentina wildfires spread to engulf key cattle farming region

24 February 2022 - 09:20
By Jonathan Gilbert
The land burned in Argentina so far this year already exceeds the 1.6 million acres that California has lost on average to wildfires annually since 2017.
Image: Bloomberg The land burned in Argentina so far this year already exceeds the 1.6 million acres that California has lost on average to wildfires annually since 2017.

Blazes are tearing through northeast Argentina, consuming more land than a typical California wildfire season and threatening a key cattle farming region in this major beef exporter.

“I’ve never seen fires like this,” said lifelong rancher Juan Jose Ramirez. Ramirez, 81, lost 1,300 hectares (3,212 acres) after a spark from a passing train ignited fields parched by the worst drought in about 70 years. “We’ve been herding 1,000 cows away from danger as the flame rings advance,” he said in a phone interview.

The fires have already swept through almost 2 million acres in Argentina’s Corrientes, about 9% of a province that’s mainly a mix of ranching pastures and protected wetlands, with little sign of relief as temperatures soar to 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 °C). The flames are consuming 30,000 hectares each day, about twice the size of New York’s Staten Island.

The land burnt in Argentina so far this year already exceeds the 1.6 million acres that California has lost on average to wildfires annually since 2017.

Climate and land-use changes are making wildfires across the globe more frequent and intense, with extreme blazes expected to increase by as much as 30% by the end of 2050, the United Nations Environment Programme said in a Wednesday report.

Argentina’s worst-hit areas are Corrientes province’s prized wetlands, which have unique ecosystems that host wildlife including jaguars, caymans and capybaras. Agricultural plains are also suffering: Corrientes is home to about 5 million cattle, nearly one-tenth of the herd in this powerhouse beef nation. The government is providing financial help to farmers like Ramirez for whom the damage is estimated to be worth $640 million, according to La Nacion newspaper.

Argentina had already been suffering from the dryness, with farmers losing crops, exporters grappling with shallow rivers, and the government forced to substitute weak hydro power when scientists are warning that climate change has brought the world to a tipping point.

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