Published: 10:57, August 24, 2024 | Updated: 11:25, August 24, 2024
Wildfires affecting 30 cities in Brazil's Sao Paulo state, leave two dead
By Reuters
Aerial image of an area of Amazon rainforest affected by illegal fire on the banks of the BR-319 road between Porto Velho, Rondonia State and Manaus, Amazonas State, northern Brazil, on Aug 22, 2024. Brazil's Sao Paulo state said that wildfire outbreaks were affecting or closing in on 30 of its cities on Friday evening. (PHOTO / AFP)

SAO PAULO - Brazil's Sao Paulo state said that wildfire outbreaks were affecting or closing in on 30 of its cities on Friday evening, adding two people had died in an industrial plant trying to hold back the flames.

The cities have been affected by dry, hot weather in recent days, the government said in a statement.

The state government also warned that forest fires could spread rapidly from gusts of wind, potentially razing large areas of natural vegetation.

For now, the government has not reported flames directly reaching the city of Sao Paulo, Latin America's largest by population with more than 11 million residents.

Still, local media reported smoke blocking out some parts of state capital's sky.

ALSO READ: Brazil's Pantanal wetlands face worst fires

The government said two employees at an industrial plant in the city of Urupes had died on Friday while fighting a fire, without providing more details.

Aerial view of heavy smoke from fires in the Amazon rainforest covering the Rondon-Roosevelt bridge over the Madeira river on Porto Velho, Rondonia State, northern Brazil, on Aug 21, 2024. (PHOTO / AFP)

Earlier in the day Raizen, the world's largest sugarcane processor, said that industrial operations at a plant in Sertaozinho had been halted since Thursday due to fires in sugarcane fields around the plant.

The Sao Paulo state government has created an emergency committee to handle the fires, which had also blocked some 15 highways either fully or partially.

Brazil's wildfire season typically peaks in August and September.

READ MORE: Fires in Brazil's Amazon rainforest for July surge to highest in two decades

This year wildfires started unusually early in Pantanal, the world's largest wetlands, in late May, while the number of fires in the Amazon rainforest surged to a two-decade high for the month of July, government data showed early this month.