Cattle gather next to a column of fire in Santo Tome, Corrientes province, Argentina, on Sunday, 20 February 2022. Fires continue to ravage the Corrientes province that has burnt more than a half-million hectares. Photo: Rodrigo Abd / AP Photo
Cattle gather next to a column of fire in Santo Tome, Corrientes province, Argentina, on Sunday, 20 February 2022. Fires continue to ravage the Corrientes province that has burnt more than a half-million hectares. Photo: Rodrigo Abd / AP Photo

By Victor Caivano
21 February 2022

CORRIENTES, Argentina (AP) – Wildfires that have been ravaging northern Argentina for several weeks advanced relentlessly Sunday, although the light rains that began over the weekend gave some hope to firefighters.

Corrientes province is the most affected area, where officials said at least eight separate fires continued to burn and had devastated at least 9% of its territory. The flames are consuming about 30,000 hectares (89,000 acres) a day in Corrientes, destroying almost 800,000 hectares so far, according to the latest official reports.

Video from 20 February 2022 shows a devastating wildfire in the province of Corrientes in northeastern Argentina that has razed almost 800,000 hectares (8,000 square kilometers) of land, or nearly 10 percent of the region’s area. Video: AP News

Strong winds, low humidity and dryness from drought have helped the fires spread since mid-January. Forecasters said the light rains that were falling Sunday were expected to continue throughout the coming week.

The mainly rural province of farms, ranches and forests normally is characterized by abundant rain.

Aerial view of the remains of trees smoldering after a fire in Santa Tecla, Corrientes province, Argentina, on Sunday, 20 February 2022. Photo: Rodrigo Abd / AP Photo
Aerial view of the remains of trees smoldering after a fire in Santa Tecla, Corrientes province, Argentina, on Sunday, 20 February 2022. Photo: Rodrigo Abd / AP Photo

“It never happened to us, we never lived something like this, we were really overcome,” said one resident, Jorge Ayala.

Authorities estimate losses so far at more than 26 billion Argentine pesos (more than $240 million), and experts say the province could need years to recover. [more]

Light rain brings hope for fire-ravaged Argentina province