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A firefighter keeps an eye on a controlled fire as they work at building a containment line near Bodalla, Australia, on Jan. 12, 2020.Rick Rycroft/The Associated Press

Australia urged foreign tourists on Tuesday to put aside concerns about raging bushfires after the United States downgraded a travel warning, even as thick smoke disrupted preparations for the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne.

Australia is experiencing one of its worst bushfire seasons on record, with fires burning since September and claiming the lives of 28 people, destroying more than 2,500 homes and razing forests and farmland the size of Bulgaria.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison welcomed the U.S. move to scale back its travel warning and said Australia was “very much open for business," amid concerns the fires would damage the tourism industry and the broader economy.

The U.S. last week warned citizens to exercise increased caution when travelling to Australia because of the fire risks, putting it on the same Level 2 advisory as protest-racked Hong Kong.

In its latest update, the U.S.State Department revised the advisory to Level 1, meaning “exercise normal precautions," however, it maintained a Level 2 warning for fire-hit areas including the central tablelands of New South Wales state and southeastern Victoria state.

Australia’s tourism industry accounts for more than 3 per cent of the country’s 1.95-trillion Australian dollar ($1.8-trillion) annual economic output. Americans are among the top visitors.

Victoria’s state capital, Melbourne, Australia’s second-biggest city and a major tourist drawcard, was blanketed in hazardous smoke on Tuesday, although cooler weather had eased the fire danger.

The city’s air quality dropped to the “worst in the world” overnight as cooler temperatures brought particles in the air close to the ground, a senior state health official said. Residents were advised to stay indoors, bring pets inside and keep windows closed.

In Melbourne, a tennis player collapsed in a coughing fit and retired from Australian Open qualifying, as organizers faced a storm of criticism for ploughing ahead with matches despite the hazardous air quality.

The bushfires have affected a number of elite sporting competitions over the Australian summer including soccer, rugby league and cricket, and poor air quality has raised fears for players’ health at tennis’s first Grand Slam of the year.

The fires have also created an ecological disaster for native species including koalas and rock wallabies.

PERSISTENT THREAT

Despite cooler weather this week, officials warned that bushfire threat was far from over.

At least 145 fires continued to burn across Victoria and New South Wales states, although widespread rainfall is forecast for fire-hit areas on the east coast from Wednesday.

About 18 bushfires were yet to be contained in New South Wales, Australia’s most populous state, while in Victoria authorities upgraded warnings to show one fire burning at an “emergency level” and seven fires at the “Watch and Act” category, one level below emergency status.

Mr. Morrison’s conservative government has faced domestic and international criticism for its handling of the fire threat and its response to climate change.

Climate scientists warned that Australia’s fires were a harbinger of what was to come for the rest of the world as the planet warmed owing to human activity.

“Temperature conditions in Australia are extreme at the moment, but they are what we expect to happen on average in a world of three degrees of global warming,” said Richard Betts, head of climate effects research at Britain’s Met Office Hadley Centre.

“It brings it home to you what climate change means.”

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