BEIJING, Jan. 10 (Xinhua) -- Forest fires killed 41
people and injured 62 in China last year, the State Forestry Administration
reported on Wednesday.
According to Cao Qingyao, spokesman for the
administration, the number of casualties was down 82.4 percent on the average
level over previous years. However, no direct comparison with last year's figure
was made available.
A total of 407,624 hectares of forest was damaged by
7,946 fires, with both figures down by nearly 40 percent on the average figures
of previous years, Cao revealed.
Statistics regarding economic losses were not
disclosed.
Most of the forest fires occurred between March and
May, when a daily average of more than 100 sites suffered from some form of
fire, Cao said.
The forestry administration reported in September
that China had suffered 7,002 forest fires in the first eight months of the
year, leaving 33 people dead, 73 injured and 380,000 hectares of forest damaged.
We spent 142 million yuan (17.75 million U.S.
dollars) on fire prevention and fire-fighting last year, and more than 20
million yuan worth of supplies were allocated, said Cao.
"Fire fighters were faced with unprecedented
challenges due to difficult access to forest fire sites and atrocious weather,"
said Cao.
Apart from forested areas in the northeast and
southwest, which are prone to blazes, several famous scenic spots in north
China, including the Fragrant Hills in the suburbs of Beijing, were also hit by
forest fires, said Cao.
Lightening strikes sparked off a blaze in China's
largest virgin camphor pine area in Hulun Buir City of Inner Mongolia in
mid-May, with 8,300 hectares of camphor pines engulfed in flames.
In the northeastern province of Heilongjiang, fires
raged for more than ten days at the Kanduhe Forest Farm in Greater Hinggan
Mountains and in Galashan area of Heihe City near Russia.
More than 33,000 people were called on to fight the
three major fires, according to the state fire-fighting headquarters.
The affected regions, which extend deep into China's
largest virgin forest in the Greater Hinggan Mountains, suffered from extremely
arid weather in May, with rainfall down 80 percent on the same period of
2005.