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Bolivia's Santa Cruz department declares emergency situation due to extreme weather condition

The Bolivian department of Santa Cruz has actually stated a state of emergency through completion of this year due to severe weather including wildfires, the departmental federal government said in a decree published on Thursday.

The latest wildfires in eastern Bolivia are preventing fuel supplies from reaching particular locations by train, regional reports said. This has exacerbated continuous diesel shortages that began earlier this week in the South American nation and made it harder for firefighters to reach affected areas.

A departmental emergency situation is declared due to the climatic changes, which have and are causing heavy rains, floods, dry spells, strong winds, extreme temperatures, forest fires, environmental pollution and other events, the decree stated.

The state of emergency, in result through Dec. 30, contacts the federal government to free up funding and resources to rapidly address the disasters.

With regards to the problem with diesel we're dealing with, we acted properly as the national federal government and prepared the purchase of diesel that has been on ships in Chilean ports for a number of days due to weather, Bolivian President Luis Arce stated on Thursday night, describing that a storm rise in Chilean ports has kept fuel from being unloaded.

The diesel was purchased from Russia, a country to which Bolivia has turned to in order to conquer its current fuel lacks. According to LSEG, the vessel Zeynep with 33,000 metric lots of diesel reached the Chilean coast this week from the Baltic Sea.

Bolivia, which has actually seen a spike in logging in current years, has big wetland areas and a huge piece of South America's Amazon rain forest.

It noted that 14 municipalities had actually declared catastrophes due to rains, landslides and flooding, 6 due to dry spell and one due to dry spell and forest fires.

Julieta Valverde, the government's natural resources director for Santa Cruz, told on Thursday around 200,000 hectares (494,210 acres) were impacted by around 25 active fires.

The federal government is currently attending to 10, she stated.

Scientists forecast that this month could beat the July record for the most fires ever recorded in that month in Bolivia, when the full scale of the damage recorded by satellite imagery is analyzed.

(source: Reuters)