California fires set bleak record as 4m acres
destroyed
4m figure double the previous record for most land
burned
Officials warn season ‘far from over and fire
potential high’
Oliver
Milman and agencies
@olliemilman
Mon 5 Oct
2020 22.17 BSTFirst published on Mon 5 Oct 2020 13.17 BST
The
wildfires that have ravaged California have reached a bleak new milestone,
having consumed 4m acres in a fire season that shows little sign of ending.
The
unprecedented figure – an area larger than Connecticut – is more than double
the previous record for the most land burned in a single year in California.
“The 4m
mark is unfathomable. It boggles the mind, and it takes your breath away,” said
Scott McLean, a spokesman for the California department of forestry and fire
protection, known as Cal Fire. “And that number will grow.”
Meanwhile
the August complex fire, in the Mendocino national forest north of San
Francisco, on Monday became the first fire in state history to surpass 1m
acres. The fire is nearly five times the size of New York City and is only 54%
contained by weary firefighters.
California’s
governor, Gavin Newsom, said the amount of land scorched by the August Complex
was larger than all of the recorded fires in California between 1932 and 1999.
“If that’s
not proof point, testament, to climate change, then I don’t know what is,”
Newsom said.
The August
Complex began as dozens of fires ignited by lightning in the national forest in
mid-August and became California’s largest fire on record in September. As of
Monday, it covered nearly 1,566 sq miles (4,055 sq km).
The fire
season, which has smothered the US west coast in smoke and turned the sky an
eerie orange, roared into life after thousands of lightning bolts struck
parched forests in August, sparking more than 8,200 wildfires that have killed
31 people and destroyed more than 8,400 buildings.
The sheer
scale of the fires means flames will scorch California for some time to come.
“This year
is far from over and fire potential remains high,” Cal Fire warned in a tweet.
“Please be cautious outdoors.“
The scale
of the fires has meant that people living far from the flames experienced a
degree of misery that in itself was unprecedented, with historically unhealthy
air quality and smoke so dense that it blurred the skies across California and
on some days even blotted out the sun.
The amount of land burned in California this season is
more than double the previous record.
Last month,
a relentless heatwave hit the state that helped fuel the fires and caused so
much air pollution that it seeped indoors, prompting stores across California
to sell out of air purifiers.
The climate
crisis is fueling the fires, scientists say, with rising temperatures causing
the amount of land burned in the US west to double since the 1980s.
Human-caused heating of the atmosphere is drying out vegetation and soils,
creating tinderbox-like conditions for fires. A century of fire suppression in
Californian forests has also caused a buildup of material to burn.
Mike
Flannigan, who directs the Canadian Partnership for Wildland Fire Science at
Canada’s University of Alberta, says the escalation of fires in California and
the US west is “largely, not solely, due to human-caused climate change”.
“Temperature
is really important to fire. Temperature is key. The warmer it is, the longer
the fire season,” he said.
“This is an
unprecedented year and the thing is there’s no vaccine for wildfires. We’re
going to have to learn to live with wildfires and the associate smoke.”
There were
signs for optimism on Sunday. Powerful winds that had been expected to drive
flames in recent days had not materialised, and warnings of extreme fire danger
for hot, dry and gusty weather expired on Saturday morning as a layer of fog
rolled in.
Clearer
skies in some areas allowed large air tankers to drop retardant after being
sidelined by smoky conditions several days earlier.
“In certain
areas, we were able to get quite a bit of aircraft in. So we really pounded, a
couple different areas hard with aircraft,” McLean said. “If the weather does
what is predicted, we’re on that glide path I hope. But that doesn’t diminish
the amount of work that still needs to be done.”
Long-range
forecast models hinted at the possibility of rain early in the week.
Fire
officials said the Glass fire burning in wine country for the past week was
their top priority. Easing winds over the weekend proved a mixed blessing for
firefighters battling the giant blaze, which is currently 17% contained.
“We are
seeing some relief in the weather, but it’s going to be three or four days
before it really makes a difference on the fire,” Cal Fire meteorologist Tom
Bird said at a Sunday news briefing. “The one good thing going forward, we’re
not expecting any wind events to push into the fire.”
The Glass
fire began last Sunday as three fires merged and drove into vineyards and
mountain areas, including part of the city of Santa Rosa. More than 30,000 were
still under evacuation orders this Sunday, down from 70,000 earlier in the week.
Among those still unable to return home are the entire 5,000-plus population of
Calistoga in Napa county.
Across the
state about 17,000 firefighters were at work battling nearly two dozen major
blazes. There have been 31 deaths and nearly 8,700 buildings have been
destroyed, the governor said.


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