Skip to main content
PreventionWeb
Navigation loading…

Navigation failed to load. If you are on the UNDRR office network, your browser may be blocking access to external resources. Learn how to allow access.

Menu
Last updated 29 Jan 2025

Recovery Collection: Australia: Black Summer Bushfires 2019-2020

Image
The 2019-20 Australian Bushfires revealed vast inequalities in the losses experienced by residents.
Bruce Detorres/Flickr

Introduction

The 2019/2020 Australian bushfire season (also known as Black Summer) that started in September 2019 to February 2020 generated many major bushfires that burned for months and raged through many Australian states including New South Wales (NSW), Victoria, Queensland, the Australian Capital Territory, Western Australia and South Australia. It caused 33 deaths, of which nine were firefighters; destroyed 3,094 houses; and burned over 17 million hectares (ha), including 210,606 ha of land on Kangaroo Island and 90,000 ha of national park in South Australia. This was considered the worst in decades, with the size of area burned greater that in the Black Saturday 2009 and Ash Wednesday 1983 bushfires combined. It is estimated that over one billion animals perished, with more than 800 million of those in NSW, making the fires the worst wildlife disaster in modern history. In early 2020, 810 priority species and ecological communities have been identified for urgent management intervention. According to scientists, recovery and restoration of native flora and fauna need an annual investment of $16 billion to avoid extinction risks. Because of the devastating impacts of the fires, the Australian Government announced the establishment of the National Bushfire Recovery Agency (NBRA) and the $2 billion National Bushfire Recovery Fund on 6 January 2020. The NBRA was established, in addition to existing arrangements for disaster recovery, to help coordinate and support the recovery of communities affected by the Black Summer bushfires. The crisis also triggered the establishment of the Royal Commission into National Natural Disaster Arrangements on 20 February 2020, which looked into the large scale disaster and examined climate change and a harmonised approach to hazard reduction.

On 13 November 2020, the Royal Commission released its report, highlighting a clearer role for the Australian Government in all phases of disaster. The Government response to the Royal Commission foreshadowed the establishment of the new National Recovery and Resilience Agency, which included the functions of the NBRA, on 5 May 2021. The recovery from the Black Summer bushfires was expected to be long and hard, with the added challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Black Summer Bushfire Recovery Grants Program supports the recovery efforts of communities in eligible Local Government Areas, with approximately $276 million made available over three years from 2021-2022 to 2023-2024. Over two years on, however, some affected families still live without adequate housing and access to water and sanitation. Rebuilding efforts moved slowly because of planning challenges, materials and labour shortages, price increases, underinsurance, and pandemic restrictions. The massive geographic scale and severity of the 2019/2020 Black Summer bushfires form part of a confirmed trend of worsening fire weather and larger, more intense wildfires caused by climate change. It has sparked growing interest in building sustainability into fire risk management and the landscape, the potential role of anthropogenic climate change and likely future trends of wildfires in Australia and around the world.

Hazards
Wildfire
Themes
Preparedness Recovery
Country and region
Australia

Knowledge base

Items: 34
ABORIGINAL COMMUNITY GOVERNANCE ON THE FRONTLINES AND FAULTLINES IN THE BLACK SUMMER BUSHFIRES
Documents and publications
25 August 2022
Aboriginal Community Governance on the Frontlines and Faultlines in the Black Summer Bushfires

This paper presents the experiences of Aboriginal peoples and the response of their communities and organisation to the 2019-2020 bushfires in Australia, captured through various media articles, reports, submissions and testimony.

Australian National University
Strengthening resilience Managing national disasters after the 2019-20 bushfire season
Documents and publications
25 August 2022
Strengthening resilience: Managing national disasters after the 2019-20 bushfire season

This documents presents the experiences and analysis of the Australian 2019-2020 bushfires and gives recommendation to inform the better natural disaster management in the country in the future.

Rainforest bird communities threatened by extreme fire
Documents and publications
25 August 2022
Rainforest bird communities threatened by extreme fire

This article presents the investigative analysis of the recovery of rainforest bird communities one-year after the 2019-2020 bushfires in Australia.

BUSHFIRE RECOVERY PROJECT No. 2
Documents and publications
25 August 2022
How do the native forests of south-eastern Australia survive bushfires? Bushfire Recovery Project Report No.2

This report is one of a series of Bushfire Science Reports prepared by the Bushfire Recovery Project, presenting the latest evidence from the scientific literature about bushfires, climate change and the native forests of southern and eastern Australia

Griffith University
Australian National University
BURNT ASSETS The 2019-2020 Australian Bushfires
Documents and publications
25 August 2022
BURNT ASSETS The 2019-2020 Australian Bushfires

This report explores how to value the environmental impacts of bushfires, illustrated with a simple analysis of how greenhouse gas emissions from bushfires reduce forest carbon (stocks), which are then partially restored through natural regrowth (flows).

World Wide Fund For Nature
Behavioural responses to multiple crises: Summary report
Documents and publications
25 August 2022
Behavioural responses to multiple crises: Summary report

This paper provides a summary of three separate papers looking at the impact and responses to the 2020 Black Summer Bushfire crisis, as well as the COVID-19 pandemic that followed.

Australian National University
Implications of the 2019–2020 megafires for the biogeography and conservation of Australian vegetation
Documents and publications
25 August 2022
Implications of the 2019–2020 megafires for the biogeography and conservation of Australian vegetation

This article presents the impacts of the Australia's 2019-2020 Black Summer bushfires on vascular plant species and communities.

Australian Wildlife and Nature Recovery Fund: Respond, Restore, and Build a Resilient Future
Documents and publications
25 August 2022
Australian Wildlife and Nature Recovery Fund: Respond, Restore, and Build a Resilient Future

This document provides the overview of the World Wildlife Fund Australian Wildlife and Nature Recovery Fund's response and recovery efforts for the 2019-2020 Bushfires in Australia.

World Wide Fund For Nature
Australia: After the bushfires
Documents and publications
25 August 2022
Australia: After the bushfires

This article of the UNESCO Courier focusing on restoring biodiversity and reviving life, shares the story of the effects of 2019-2020 bushfires on the biodiversity in Australia.

United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
2019-20 South Australian Bushfire Recovery Interim Report
Documents and publications
Reports and analysis
25 August 2022
2019-20 South Australian Bushfire Recovery Interim Report

This Report tells the story of the Yorketown, Cudlee Creek, Kangaroo Island and other fires in 2019-2020 and the achievements of the early recovery phase across the four domains of recovery: social, economic, built environment and the natural environment.

Australia - government

Pagination

Showing results 11–20 on this page

  • Previous
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • Next

Is this page useful?

Yes No
Report an issue on this page

Thank you. If you have 2 minutes, we would benefit from additional feedback (link opens in a new window).

The International Recovery Platform (IRP) is a global partnership working to strengthen knowledge, and share experiences and lessons on building back better in recovery, rehabilitation, and reconstruction.

Latest IRP videos and photos: YouTube Flickr Contact IRP

Loading