The world’s largest firefighting aircraft has flown in from the US, alongside help from France, Peru and Mexico, as fires continue to ravage Chilean lands

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

The world’s biggest aerial firefighting aircraft has joined beleaguered firefighters in Chile as they battle the worst wildfires in the country’s recent history.

More than 90 blazes have scorched 180,000 hectares, razed hundreds of homes, turned village schools to ashes and destroyed cattle herds and vineyards.

A prolonged campaign to extinguish the flames has claimed four firefighters’ lives, but the forestry service said 35 fires remain out of control.

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The government has dispatched more than 40 helicopters and light aircraft to douse the ground, but its efforts have been criticised as inadequate, particularly since the director of the forestry service admitted half its aircraft are out of operation.

Firefighters have taken to the airwaves to appeal for planes to help combat the fire in remote regions.

Chilean president Michelle Bachelet visited the community of Empedrado in Maule, one of the worst affected regions, where she faced a barrage of questions from locals who were angry at what they saw as the slow response of the authorities.

“I understand there is pain and rage,” the president said. “We have never seen anything on this scale, never in the history of Chile. The truth is that the forces are doing everything humanly possible and will continue until they can contain and control the fires.”

Her government declared a state of emergency last week and requested international assistance to cope with the fire.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest A Boeing 747-400 supertanker, flown in from a US air force base, drops its load south of Santiago. Photograph: Pablo Vera Lisperguer/AFP/Getty Images

Help has come from France, Peru, Mexico and the US. The most visible sign of support arrived on Wednesday morning in the form of a Boeing 747-400 supertanker, which flew in from a US air force base in Colorado on a fire-fighting operation funded to the tune of about $2m by a wealthy Chilean resident in the US, Lucy Ana Aviles.

With the capacity to carry 73,000 litres of water, local media say a single run by the jumbo is equivalent to that of 72 helicopter and 20 light aircraft missions.

However, there are questions about its effectiveness in the small mountain valleys where many of the fires are raging.

The government has granted permission for two days of test flights. Representatives of the company that own the plane cautioned that it was “not a magic wand”, but could complement the work of fire brigades on the ground.

Soon after arrival in Chile, the giant plane was loaded with water and fire-suppressing foam and gels and sent on its first mission to the Maule region, where the latest fire-fighting fatality occurred hours earlier.

Hernán Avilés González was killed rescuing a family of three who had been trapped in their rural home in Santa Olga. The inhabitants were saved, but the fireman – who had been battling the blaze for several days – became entangled in wires and fell victim to the flames.

Reporting on his death, the Constitutión mayor Carlos Valenzuela told reporters. “This is a real hell. We are absolutely overtaken.”



Evacuations have saved other lives, but the fires have so far left 256 people without homes and ruined countless livelihoods.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Firefighters working amid the remains of buildings destroyed by a fire in Cauquenes, Chile. Photograph: Dragomir Yankovic/AFP/Getty Images

“All my fields burned, there were four hectares that I had and it all burned,” Susana Molina, a boutique wine producer, told Reuters. She is from Cauquenes in the Maule region, where the local industry association reports damage to around 100 small vineyards.

Elsewhere livestock have been engulfed in the flames. Chile’s public works ministry announced plans this week to dispatch heavy machinery to bury the hundreds of animal carcasses.

The human, environmental and economic toll is expected to rise as the dry spell – temperatures that have reached 40C(104F) – and strong winds create the perfect conditions for fires to spread.

Earlier this week, satellite images from the US space agency Nasa showed a brown plume stretching about 300km along the Pacific seaboard, originating from clusters of fires around Pichilemu and Constitutión.

The agency noted that forest fires are a regular phenomenon in Chile, but have been more frequent in recent years. There were 6,700 in the 2015-16 season, compared to an average of 5,200 between 1990 and 2000.

The government has launched an investigation into the cause of the fires – some of which appear to have been deliberately started, others caused by negligence – and whether the response of the authorities was adequate.