Entire
cities evacuate as hellish wildfires whip through California
By Eric
Holthaus
9
November, 2018
A
trio of rapidly expanding wildfires are burning in California,
marking the latest in a string of harrowing climate-related disasters
in America.
As
of Friday night, the Camp Fire has killed at least nine people and
destroyed 6,713 buildings in the Northern California city of
Paradise, but those numbers could still increase as officials
continue their surveys. It’s now the most destructive wildfire in
state history.
In
Southern California, low humidity combined with strong offshore Santa
Ana winds prompted the National Weather Service to issue an
“extremely critical” fire weather alert, its highest warning for
wildfire risk. Two fires there are rapidly expanding towards the
coast causing the city of Malibu to evacuate.
These
are firestorms — towering, fast-moving walls of flames hundreds of
feet high — the kind of fires that are not only uncontrolled by
firefighters, but uncontrollable. In Southern California, fire
burning through wind-whipped palm trees on Thursday resembled a
hurricane.
“This
is the new normal,” Los Angeles County Fire Captain Erik Scott told
a local television station. “When we have conditions like this,
when it’s such incredible wind, that brings us into a different
caliber.” Acting California Governor Gavin Newsom has requested an
emergency presidential disaster declaration from Trump to speed the
flow of federal aid to victims.
Meteorologists
marveled at the “gut-wrenching” rate of spread Thursday’s fires
exhibited. At one point, the Camp Fire was consuming 80 football
fields worth of land per minute, fueled by winds of up to 50 mph.
That fire grew more than 20-fold in about six hours just before it
overtook the town of Paradise, home to about 27,000 people. By
nightfall, the fire had expanded in size to 70,000 acres, and was
just 5 percent contained. A reporter’s video caught a fire tornado
on camera, an exclamation mark on a truly hellish scene:
#
By
all accounts, the scrambled evacuation of Paradise was harrowing.
There were reports of people abandoning their vehicles trapped in
heavy traffic, clutching children and running for safety under
blackened skies. At least one cluster of about 70 people were
airlifted from a Walgreens. Video from the exodus is
nightmare-inducing, and is difficult to watch. During the height of
the blaze, firefighters completely surrendered firefighting duties in
order to focus on rescuing people.
On
Friday morning, gruesomely burned cars littered the side of the road.
“The whole town is gone,” Gianna Wallace, a survivor, told
Sacramento Bee reporter Ryan Sabalow. That assessment was echoed by
Scott McLean, a spokesperson for CALFIRE, who told the Los Angeles
Times that the Camp Fire “has destroyed the town.”
Smoke
from the fire drifted in a huge plume and set off smoke alarms as far
away as San Francisco, nearly 150 miles away.
In
Southern California, two fires burned near the town of Thousand Oaks
with towering smoke clouds visible at the site of a mass shooting
where a gunman killed more than a dozen people just hours earlier.
The Hill Fire caused an evacuation of Cal State University-Channel
Islands and about 1,000 homes. More worrying is the Woolsey Fire,
which threatens about 75,000 homes in both Ventura and Los Angeles
Counties — including the entire city of Malibu. At least one family
was grieving both tragedies, losing a loved one in the shooting and
being forced to evacuate because of the fire all within 24 hours,
according to the Los Angeles Times.
This
week’s fires come just months after July’s Carr Fire destroyed
large parts of Redding, California, and a little over a year after
the Tubbs Fire devastated Napa and Sonoma Counties — the most
damaging wildfire on record in California. Six of California’s 10
worst fires on record have come in just the past three years.
After
an exceptionally hot and dry summer, the vegetation in Northern
California near one of the fires is the driest ever measured so late
in the year.
Rapidly
expanding wildfires in California are part of a worrying trend across
the West and around the world that is attributable to climate change.
Two human-related trends are most responsible: More people are moving
to areas prone to fire while hotter, drier weather is making fires
blossom and spread more quickly. Wildfire seasons are lengthening as
temperatures rise and droughts become more frequent. Over the past 40
years, the area burned by wildfire across the West has doubled.
Globally, the surge in burning forests is making warming worse, too,
expelling nearly half as much as all industrial sources worldwide in
the worst years.
This
week’s fires, along with the countless other recent record-breaking
weather disasters, send a clear message: The era of climate
consequences is here. We should treat this as the emergency it is.
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