By Robb M. Stewart 
 

MELBOURNE, Australia--Wildfires consuming parts of eastern Australia are unlikely to dent the economy in the way other natural disasters have in recent years, despite being the worst to strike the country's most-populous state since the 1960s.

The biggest fires are centered in the Blue Mountains region west of Sydney, an area that's popular with tourists but is away from farmland and key resource-producing regions.

Unlike severe floods in northeastern Queensland state nearly three years ago that wiped out fruit and vegetable crops and disrupted coal shipments for months, the latest wildfires will have an "almost negligible" impact on economic activity, Australia & New Zealand Banking Group senior economist Felicity Emmett said in a research report Friday. "The bushfires have caused little or no damage to the local infrastructure," she said.

On Friday, dozens of fires continued to burn across eastern New South Wales, although the state's Rural Fire Service said only a handful were still out of control as cooler temperatures in recent days helped firefighters tackle the blazes. More than 200 homes have been destroyed and another 100 damaged in the Blue Mountains since the fires were sparked last Thursday by unusually high spring temperatures and strong winds across the state.

The country has been hit by a succession of extreme weather events in recent years. In 2009, 173 people were killed by wildfires that swept across Victoria state, and in late 2010 and early 2011 Queensland state was hit hard by flooding and cyclones.

Insurance losses for the latest fires have reached around 138 million Australian dollars (US$132.5 million), the Insurance Council of Australia, an organization representing insurers, estimated Friday.

Insurance Australia Group Ltd. (IAG.AU) said it had so far received about 600 claims, but with assessors unable to visit all affected areas and fires still burning it was too soon to give an indication of cost. The company's exposure is capped at A$150 million this year, after which its reinsurance kicks in.

The damage bill from cyclones, flooding and fires swelled to more than A$5 billion in 2011--one of the worst years on record for natural disasters in Australia. The Queensland floods alone saw more than 25 million tons of coal production lost and shaved around three-quarters of a percentage point from economic growth in fiscal 2011, according to ANZ.

By comparison, insurance losses so far this year from wildfires and tropical storms stand at around A$1.4 billion, the Insurance Council said.

Rail and port operator Asciano Ltd. (AIO.AU) said Friday the New South Wales fires had damaged its rail network, disrupting coal-haulage. A line transporting coal from the Blue Mountains was closed Oct. 18, but should be running again next week, a spokesman said.

Asciano hauls coal across New South Wales state, including from several big mines in the Hunter Valley, to export facilities like the Port of Newcastle, the world's largest coal export terminals. Among its major clients are Glencore Xstrata International PLC (GLEN.LN) and Rio Tinto PLC's (RIO.LN) Coal & Allied unit.

-Rhiannon Hoyle in Sydney contributed to this article

Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com

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