Thousands
leave home as Californian wildfire consumes 54,000 acres
Thousands
leave their homes as large wildfire spreads. It has scorched about
54,000 acres of land east of Lower Lake, California. Report by Asana
Greenstreet
“Tinderbox”
California Calls in the National Guard as Horrific Wildfire Season
Looms
Eric
Holthaus
3
August, 2015
California
has activated its National Guard to support the state’s overworked
firefighters after Gov. Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency for
wildfires on Friday. And across
the West,
where temperatures have been well
above normal for
months and drought continues
to intensify,
firefighters are bracing for what may be a historic few months.
California’s
wildfire season is already on a frantic pace, and activity typically
doesn’t peak until September or October. The outlook for
the rest of the summer isespecially
dire in
Southern California. Or, as
Brown said in a statement:
"California's severe drought and extreme weather have turned
much of the state into a tinderbox.”
In
this long exposure, lights from a car streak by as flames and a huge
plume of smoke rise into the air as the Rocky fire burns near Clear
Lake, California on August 2, 2015.
Photo
by Josh Edelson/AFP/Getty Images
Firefighters’ current
top priority is
the Rocky Fire, just north of San Francisco, which has
already burned more
than 93 square miles—an area bigger than the city of Seattle. As
of Monday morning,
it was just 12 percent contained.
According
to the latest
report from
the state of California, the fire threatens more than 6,000
structures, and more than 12,000 people have been evacuated. Nearly
3,000 firefighters are on the scene, including 254 fire engines, 58
bulldozers, and 23 aircraft. The fire grew “dramatically” over
the weekend, more than doubling in size just on Sunday alone.
\Cal
Fire firefighters watch a large plume of smoke as it rises from the
Rocky Fire on August 1, 2015 near Clearlake, California. Photo
by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
While
slightly higher humidity levels have begun to give firefighters an
edge, that’s also meant an
increased risk of
dry thunderstorms. Between Thursday and Sunday there were more than
13,000 lightning strikes statewide, sparking more
than 260 new fires just on National Forest lands alone. More dry
thunderstorms are in
the forecast this
week. The combination of frequent lightning and a crushing drought
means that in some cases, firefighters can only fall back in retreat.
As Slate’s
Beth Ethier recently
wrote,
California firefighters have another menace besides lightning and
climate change that’s complicating their efforts: drones. On at
least three occasions this summer, firefighters have had to halt fire
suppression efforts by aircraft to avoid mid-air collisions with
private drones. Lawmakers are now proposing federal prison time for
operators of future flights over fires. Another possible solution:
drone shaming. The U.S. Forest Service and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture have produced a nifty
retro-looking poster that’s
made the rounds on social media with the message that drone pilots
could cause death to firefighters.
A headline from the future: Drones Are Grounding Wildfire Fighting Aircraft in California http://t.co/xRO5ozs3jE pic.twitter.com/GkPtdBXS9A
— Robbie Whiting (@robbiew) July 20, 2015
This
year’s rabid
wildfire season is
far from just a California problem. A new
studyled
by a U.S. Forest Service official found that, thanks to changes in
weather patterns consistent with global warming, wildfire seasons
have grown longer worldwide over the last 35 years. Regions of East
Africa, western North America, and the Amazon basin have shown the
most pronounced gains—an increase of more than a month.
And
in the U.S., more than 1.6 million acres are
currently ablaze nationwide,
totaling about half the size of Connecticut. To date in 2015, fires
have burned nearly 2 millionmore acres
than the ten-year average. The vast majority of this year’s
activity has
been in Alaska,
which is fresh off its hottest year on record.
In
the Pacific Northwest, parts of the rainforest in Olympic National
Park are
on fire.
“While it may seem unusual to have a fire of this size burning in a
rain forest, this is a reflection of severe conditions—the driest
spring in over 100 years and a snowpack that was only 14% of
average,” said a government fire
update.
Park officials don’t
expect the
fire to be fully out until they receive “substantial rain or
snowfall.” It will be while.
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