A dairy farmer is dead, homes have been lost and about 220,000 households without power after bushfires and storms ravaged Victoria.
The Victorian premier, Jacinta Allan, confirmed a man, 50, died when storms hit the South Gippsland region, in the state’s east, on Tuesday night. She expressed her condolences to his family and first responders.
It came as bushfires burn in western Victoria, where authorities were trying to confirm how many homes have been lost, and electricity outages continue in parts of the state. Some schools in central and western Victoria, as well as in Melbourne’s south-east, have been closed as a result.
Allan said the catastrophic bushfire risk declared on Tuesday was downgraded to extreme on Wednesday morning.
“To give it some context, yesterday was only the second day since the fires of black Saturday in 2009, 15 years ago, that had that catastrophic rating,” she said. Fire crews battled to control the bushfires overnight.
Hundreds of thousands of homes remained without power after damaging winds brought down major transmission towers, causing a coal power station to shut down.
Allan said recovery teams were working street-by-street to assess the damage from the storms.
“There is significant damage statewide caused by those storms and much of it is localised damage, which is why your power may be out,” she said.
“If you can look out the window or walk out the front door and see that trees are down across roads, trees are down and impacting across powerlines, that is possibly why the power is out and why the teams are out there undertaking the rapid assessments to get the power reconnected.”
As at Wednesday morning, about 220,000 homes and businesses were still without power.
Fire crews were on Tuesday assessing the impact that a blaze near the Grampians national park has had on the Pomonal community.
Homes, hostels and business were evacuated across the region. But 750 metres from the Grampians national park, Aidan Banfield said he was “really confident” about staying to defend his camping and caravan parkland.
“Beyond a certain size or property, people have a lot of [firefighting] equipment, particularly big farmers. They’ve been on the land for a long time and have a lot of experience,” he said.
“The classic pitch you see … is a little hose fighting fires, and that happens. But there’s definitely others that have really significant power.”
Banfield said having lived through the 2006 Mount Lubra fires helped prepare himself and other residents to fight future fires.
The fire threat has eased in the Mount Stapylton and Bellfield areas in the Grampians national park after residents were told seek shelter on Tuesday afternoon.
Conditions were also better on Wednesday around a bushfire at Newtown near Ballarat after residents were told to evacuate after a grassfire spread into a forest and morphed into a bushfire.
The transport department on Wednesday urged motorists to be patient and stay alert for hazards as storm damage had affected the road and transport network.
A number of bus replacement services were in place on Wednesday morning and the Western Highway remains closed between Horsham and Stawell.
Firefighters in burnover at Pomonal
Five country firefighters suffered minor injuries after their truck was involved in a burnover at a fireground at Pomonal on Tuesday night.
The firefighters were pre-positioned in the town and tasked with protecting homes and critical infrastructure, said Chris Hardman, chief of Forest Fire Management Victoria.
“When the wind change came through, the fire moved very rapidly into Pomonal and those firefighters were caught between the fire front and the work they were doing in protecting communities,” Hardman told ABC News.
“We don’t have a full understanding of the fire front and the impact it’s had on the township, but it certainly has impacted sections of the Pomonal township and we’ve had some losses.”
Phillip Vaughan’s Australian native nursery in Pomonal was damaged by the fires, losing “significant” gardens and plants grown over the last four decades.
“We’re just trying to get the water back up and running so we can water the nursery,” he said.
Vaughan told Guardian Australia plants grown for the Melbourne International Flower and Garden Show next month were damaged in the fire, including rare native grown for a show garden display.
“It will be interesting trying to replace [plants], but it’s the people who’ve lost their houses we’re more concerned about. We’ll soldier on. We can do a bit of replanting and do whatever we can do,” he said.