‘Multiple
disasters all in one day’: New Mexico’s brutal week of fire and flood
Burning
slopes are now battered by golf ball-sized hail and 8in of rain, creating a
grim mix of extreme weather events
Gabrielle
Canon
Sat 22 Jun
2024 14.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/article/2024/jun/22/new-mexico-wildfires-floods-disaster
It’s been a
harrowing week of fire and flood in New Mexico. Just days after a pair of
fast-moving fires roared across drought-stricken landscapes and into
communities, a tropical storm swirled north, unleashing downpours and golf
ball-sized hail over scorched slopes that had only just burned.
As the
dueling dangers of two weather extremes converged, charred debris flowed into
neighborhoods, crews were temporarily evacuated from the firefight as emergency
officials pivoted from fire support to flood rescues, and strong winds swept up
dried soils to create one of the largest dust storms the state has ever seen.
Across the
arid south-west, where fire risks typically rise with the temperatures in the
spring before they are doused in a summer monsoon, weather patterns like these
aren’t unheard of. But the climate crisis has supercharged extreme conditions,
setting the stage for new types of catastrophes that are increasing in both
intensity and frequency.
South Fork
Fire near Ruidoso<br>Smoke from the South Fork Fire covers the sun,
casting an orange light across the Lincoln National Forest at Cedar Creek, in
Ruidoso, New Mexico, U.S. June 17, 2024. REUTERS/Kaylee Greenlee Beal TPX
IMAGES OF THE DAY
“We are used
to these disasters, but I don’t think this agency has ever dealt with anything
like this,” said Dr Jeremy Klass, the recovery and mitigation bureau chief of
New Mexico’s department of homeland security and emergency management. “We are
dealing with two disasters right on top of one another.”
The South
Fork and Salt fires are still burning and remain at 0% containment and
communities across the south of the state are bracing for more rain. After
erupting on the Mescalero Apache Reservation, the blazes burned hot and fast,
sweeping across more than 23,400 areas collectively and leveling neighborhoods.
An estimated
1,400 structures have been lost to the flames, according to officials who are
still finishing the grim tallies of burned buildings, and at least two people
died while fleeing the fires. Meanwhile, roughly 8,000 people have been
displaced, as they await the news of what will remain when they are allowed to
return.
While the
infusion of moisture from Tropical Storm Alberto – the first named storm in
what’s expected to be a heavy hurricane season – helped slow the fires’ spread
and bumped local humidity, it also caused chaos. Emergency management crews had
to quickly shift gears from fire support to water rescues as curtains of rain
inundated the burn scar. Up to 8in of rain poured on villages in the central
part of New Mexico – more rainfall than some parts of the state typically see
in a year.
Fire crews
had to be temporarily evacuated from the fire line for their safety as the
storm hit, according to officials, before they rushed to try to mitigate the
risks of more debris flows. “On most fires, we get through the fire phase and
can secure things before storms start to hit,” Arthur Gonzalez, a fire behavior
analyst on the incident team, said during a community meeting on Thursday,
explaining that there are usually weeks to prepare for such an event. “We are
having to do both at the same time.”
As first
responders and officials grappled with a chaotic mix of conditions, the wild
weather had one more curveball to throw at New Mexico: the gusty winds kicked
up a wall of dust that stretched hundreds of miles long.
The dust
storm, known as a “haboob”, rapidly clouded visibility across major highways as
it swept across New Mexico and into Arizona. Ali Rye, the state director of New
Mexico’s department of homeland security and emergency management, said she’d
spent Thursday morning trying to support recovery efforts from the fires and
floods when she got the call that there was a 20-car pile-up that shut down the
interstate. Fifty people were injured in the accident.
“It is
multiple disasters all in one day,” she said, adding that the overlap has made
each more traumatizing for affected communities.
It’s part of
a troubling trend. By Rye’s tally, the number of state-declared disasters in
New Mexico has quadrupled since 2019. “We are seeing an increase in the impacts
to our state in various ways and it has become increasingly challenging over
the last couple of years,” she said. “And we are not out of the clear yet.”
The threats
are only going to rise as the world continues to warm.
While it
will take time for scientists to better understand whether this week’s events
are tied to the climate crisis, “temperatures are easily attributable to
climate change”, said Dr Andrew Hoell, a research meteorologist at the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa).
Broiling
weather across the south-west has baked more moisture out of landscapes and
plants, accelerating drought and increasing wildfire risks. It has also dried
the topsoils that are carried by winds to create dust storms.
New Mexico
has been in the grips of a severe drought and conditions are only expected to
intensify through the end of the summer, even with the monsoons. “That’s the
lingering long-term drought over the area,” said the state climatologist, Dr
David DuBois, who added that record-high temperatures have taken a toll. “We
have had 11 days over 100F already – and it’s still June.”
DuBois said
the state is preparing for a flip to monsoon season, when there will be more
rain and more risks to burn scars, but the tropical storm that blew north this
week was unexpected. There are hopes that, even with the negative impacts from
the rain, the wetter weather will help quiet fire activity and give crews what
they need to corral the blazes. But it’s expected to do little to relieve the
longterm dryness.
“We have had
some really good bumps of rain, but it is lost through higher temperatures,”
DuBois said. “One season doesn’t change the whole situation – that’s what’s on
my mind. We may get a bunch of rain but then it goes back to really dry again.”
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