Extract from The Guardian
Area burned is larger than Delaware state as west is shrouded in smoke that has caused some of the worst air quality in the world
Wildfires have burned a record 2m acres of California, with fresh conflagrations forcing thousands to make dramatic evacuations and shrouding much of the US west in smoke that has caused some of the worst air quality in the world.
The area burned this year is now larger than the state of Delaware, surpassing the annual state record of 1.96m acres that went up in flames throughout 2018, according to the California department of forestry and fire protection, or Cal Fire.
The scale and intensity of the fires, which have arrived before seasonal winds that typically spread flames throughout forests, have stunned firefighters hardened to huge blazes in the state.
“It’s a little unnerving because September and October are historically our worst months for fires,” said Lynne Tolmachoff, a spokeswoman for Cal Fire.
Scientists say the climate crisis is causing larger fires and an elongated fire season in the US west, by spurring extreme heat and the drying out of fire-prone vegetation.
“California has always been the canary in the coalmine for climate change, and this weekend’s events only underscore that reality,” said Gavin Newsom, California’s Democratic governor.
More than 14,000 firefighters are struggling to contain dozens of fires across California, which is in the grip of a record heatwave and is forecast to experience potentially calamitous windy conditions in the coming days.
Newsom has declared a state of emergency, with complete evacuations ordered for several remote communities in the Sierra Nevada mountain range. Forests have been shut off to the public due to a “monumental fire threat” that has caused firefighting resources to be “stretched to the limit”, the US Forest Service said.
The largest fire, known as the Creek Fire, has rapidly burned through more than 78,000 acres in the Sierras. The blaze trapped more than 200 people at the edge of a lake in Fresno county on Saturday in what firefighters called “hellish” conditions. The group, mostly campers and hikers, had to be rescued in spectacular fashion by the California national guard, which used helicopters to hoist the imperiled people to safety. About 20 people had injuries ranging from broken bones to burns.
“About half the private homes in town burned down,” he said. “Words cannot even begin to describe the devastation of this community.”
A total of eight people have died in the fires, Cal Fire said, but more widespread health problems are likely to be triggered by the pall of smoke that has engulfed much of the west coast. Dangerously unhealthy smoke pollution has been recorded throughout California, as well as Nevada, Oregon and Washington. Doctors have warned the choking haze is dangerous to vulnerable people, such as those with respiratory problems.
Fires have roared to life amid scorching temperatures, with Los Angeles county reporting its highest ever temperature of 49.4C (121F) on Sunday, just a few weeks after California’s Death Valley recorded what may be the hottest temperature captured on Earth: 54.4C (129F).
This heat is causing cascading crises for the state, including its power supply. PG&E, the largest utility in the state, has shut down the electricity supply to parts of northern California to reduce the chance of igniting more wildfires. Power blackouts, caused by surging energy use, have blighted many Californians, with people in Los Angeles advised to limit their electricity consumption.
Many of the fires were ignited by an unusual burst of lightning strikes last month. But human actions, intentional or otherwise, have also played a role.
A couple who held a “gender reveal” party for their unborn child on Saturday set off a smoke bomb that was meant to send plumes of pink or blue smoke into the air. Instead, the pyrotechnic device torched dry wild grasses in El Dorado Ranch Park, around 80 miles east of Los Angeles, causing a mammoth fire that forced 20,000 people to evacuate.
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