A human-lit fire has already devoured 12,000 hectares of native forest and commercial pine plantations in Chubut, forcing Argentina to accept Chilean air-tankers while engineers scramble to protect a critical hydro plant and 295 front-line responders battle 40 °C gusts.
What’s at Stake: Power, Timber and a Tourist Town
The active front is now less than four kilometres from the Florentino Ameghino dam, a 120-megawatt facility that supplies 8 % of Patagonia’s electricity. A secondary tongue of fire has already forced the evacuation of a rural primary school and 42 homes in the village of El Hoyo, a gateway for trekkers visiting the nearby Chubut River valley.
Arson Suspected: Governor Posts $34,000 Reward
Chubut Governor Ignacio Torres told reporters late Thursday that satellite heat data and simultaneous ignition points point to deliberate lighting. A 50-million-peso bounty—roughly $34,000—is now on offer for information leading to an arrest, a sum that equals four years’ average local wages.
Record Deployment: 15 Aircraft, 295 Crew, Chilean Support
Argentine cabinet chief Manuel Adorni confirmed Sunday that the national firefighting task-force has deployed:
- Nine water-bombing aircraft (four Air-Tractor 802s, three Bell 212 helicopters, two Chinooks)
- Six observation planes equipped with infrared mapping
- 42 fire engines and four bulldozers
- 295 trained wild-land firefighters backed by army logistics units
Across the Andes, Chilean President Gabriel Boric offered two additional Air-Tractor 602 tankers and a C-130 Hercules loaded with fire-retardant gel—support Argentina accepted within hours.
Climate Vector: Drought, Wind and a Tinder-Box Landscape
The region is locked in its third consecutive year of La Niña-driven drought. Humidity has plunged to 15 % while gusts topping 70 km/h carry embers as far as 3 km ahead of the main front. Commercial pine plantations—planted in the 1990s to supply the now-shuttered Chubut paper mill—act as high-energy fuel ladders, turning native lenga and ñire beech forests into explosive crowns.
History Repeats: Last Year’s 100,000-Hectare Scar
Patagonia endured its worst fire season in six decades just 12 months ago when separate fronts in Neuquén, Río Negro and Santa Cruz burned more than 100,000 hectares, destroyed 63 homes and killed a volunteer brigade chief. Budget cuts slashed Argentina’s federal firefighting fund by 28 % in 2025, leaving provinces to rely on volunteer crews and donated equipment.
Community Anger: “We’re Buying Our Own Gloves”
Jorge Aranea, a volunteer firefighter in El Hoyo, told reporters Friday that crews are re-using burned hoses and pooling personal funds for fuel. “It’s sad to see everything burning. And sometimes you do what you can and it’s not enough,” he said. Local mayors have started a #PinerosEmergency crowdfunding campaign to buy portable pumps and flame-resistant clothing.
What Happens Next: Forecast, Containment Lines and Power Risk
The National Meteorological Service predicts zero rainfall through 18 January and sustained 50 km/h winds, pushing the blaze toward the dam’s access road. If flames cross the Chubut River gorge, operators will shut down turbines to protect high-voltage switchgear—an outage that could darken three Patagonian provinces for up to 48 hours while crews rebuild transmission lines.
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