California in Losing Battle With Climate Change as Wildfires Devour 700 Homes, Force 23,000 to Flee
14 September, 2015
One that has greatly contributed to the death of millions of trees across the state and increased fire risk to extreme and likely never before seen levels.
As of Sunday, firefighters were battling nearly three dozen large blazes or clusters of fires in California and six other Western states, according to the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho.
Sheriff Brian Martin described the fire as “the worst tragedy Lake County has ever seen.”
(Escaping the Valley Fire. Central Valley resident flees unprecedented and dangerous climate change spurred fires late Sunday night. Human forced warming is making these fires more common — creating a very dangerous situation for the US West.)
For decades now, researchers have identified drought in the southwestern US as one of the primary hazards of human-forced climate change. But this year, after five years of related drying, some of the worst wildfires in the Golden State’s history are threatening both Sacramento and the Central Valley.
“We Have Nothing”
Now, as of early morning on Tuesday, nearly 150,000 acres of wildfires in Central California have destroyed more than 700 homes and over 1,200 structures, endangered more than 9,000 more, resulted in the calling up of an army of 2,000 firefighters (For this region alone. Across the US West more than 18,000 firefighters are battling blazes), killed at least one person, and forced more than 23,000 to flee (see more here). It’s an egregious human toll. One in which more
and more people are saying heart-wrenching words like these — “We have nothing.”
(Climate change refugees in the USA. Thousands of California residents have been displaced and hundreds have lost their homes due to a recent severe wildfire outbreak related to human-caused climate change. Video source: State of Emergency Declared.)
Perhaps the worst thing of all about these globally mounting tragedies is the fact that these increasing instances of extreme, climate change driven weather, were preventable. Now we are forced to live with the damage, danger, and tragic loss of lives and homes we’ve already locked in. Now we are forced to hope that wiser leaders than the ones we’ve had thus far will work as hard as possible to limit the degree of terrible harm that is all too certainly on the way.
There are harsh consequences to dumping 11 billion tons of carbon into the atmosphere each and every year. A rate faster, as an initial forcing, than at any rate in geological history.Governor Jerry Brown, horrified by the severity of the situation this week stated —
“We are really in a battle with nature, … nature is more powerful than we are.”
Partly true. What’s really happening is that we’ve riled nature into a climate change driven frenzy of heat and fire. And it’s becoming too violent for us to manage.
Links:
Stunning Video Emerges As 1000s Flee California Wildfires After Governor Calls 'State Of Emergency'
14
September, 2015
As
if the drought was not disheartening enough, wildfires are now raging
across many parts of northen and southern California focing Governor
Jerry Brown to call a state of emergency.
Nowhere is the crisis more evident than in NorCal's Lake County
where, as The LA Times reports, the untamed wildfireforced
chaotic evacuations, is consuming hundreds of homes and businesses,
and has outrun the efforts of a growing army of firefighters to
corral it. However,
as the following clip shows, one
car-driver ran the gauntlet and
managed to outrun "the worst tragedy Lake County has ever seen,"
in ascene
right out of a disaster movie.
The pictures from CA's newest fire are simply apocalyptic. Too hot, too dry, for too longpic.twitter.com/1tEXCbY1L0
— Bill McKibben (@billmckibben) September 14, 2015
A swiftly spreading wildfire destroyed hundreds of homes and forced thousands of residents to flee as it roared unchecked through the northern California village of Middletown and nearby communities, fire officials said on Sunday.
The so-called Valley Fire, now ranked as the most destructive among scores of blazes that have ravaged the drought-stricken Western United States this summer, came amid what California fire officials described as "unheard of fire behavior" this season.
A separate fire raging since Wednesday in the western Sierras has leveled more than 130 buildings and was threatening about 6,400 other structures, with thousands of residents under evacuation orders there, too, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) reported.
Governor Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency in both areas, and mandatory evacuations were expanded as shifting winds sent flames and ash from the Valley Fire toward a cluster of towns in the hills north of Napa Valley wine country.
As
the following clip shows, locals had no time to prepare as they ran
the gauntlet to survival...
"Middletown
is basically gone," said
one local evacuee.
"I saw flames all around ... The wind was insane. I have never been so scared," she said.
Mark Donpineo, 54, said he and two friends were trapped by the fire for four hours Saturday evening at a golf course in Hidden Valley Lake, taking cover in a culvert until the flames had passed.
"We got some towels, wetted them down and basically saw the fire coming. You could hear explosions of propane tanks, the ridge was totally on fire, trees were blowing up," he said.
Meanwhile, Cal Fire reported that 81 homes and 51 outbuildings had been lost in the four-day-old Butte Fire, which has charred more than 65,000 acres in the mountains east of Sacramento but was 20 percent contained.
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