Good luck, I recall fires when I visited a friend in Sydney around 20 years ago.
The ENSO (el Nino southern oscillation) is a large patch of pacific ocean that gets warmer (el nino) or cooler (la nina) then normal. The ENSO can affect climate thousands of miles away.
Predictions and current measurements show ENSO-neutral with slightly warmer temps in western Pacific and slightly cooler temps in eastern Pacific (averaging out). I am paying attention to this because we are now entering the active hurricane season (my storms come east to west out of Africa and across the Atlantic), but lately the tropical storms have been driven up north into the Atlantic away from landfall (on top of me).
I have mentioned the fires in Amazon rain forest before, but this is getting more public attention from EU leaders that were funding stabilization efforts in the amazon and angry about the apparent back sliding. Even the President everyone loves to hate has offered to help President Bolsonaro put out the fires. Bolsonaro has announced he was sending tens of thousands of troops to put out the fires, but I think the fires are still burning.
I would hate to see this natural resource (unique ecosystem that generates copious O2 and biodiversity we all want preserved) destroyed for short term economic gain, but not an easy choice for those directly involved. We wealthy nations have the luxury of taking a longer term perspective. I suspect Brazil does not appreciate being told what to do, for everyone else's benefit.
JR