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AmericasNEWSPakistan

Climate change crisis generates monstrous fire in California

SRI NewsDesk
By SRI NewsDesk Published July 27, 2021
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The Dixie Fire has been raging in the forests of northern California since mid-July, part of a climate crisis that has brought sweltering heat and an alarming drought. Over the weekend it merged with another fire, prompting new evacuation orders.

A preliminary investigation said the Dixie Fire broke out after a tree fell on one of the thousands of power lines that dot the state’s landscape.

The power line was owned by Pacific Gas & Company (PG&E), a private operator previously found guilty of causing a fire that nearly wiped out the nearby town of Paradise and killed 86 people.

Currently, thousands of US firefighters are battling a blaze in California that has grown so big it is generating its own weather system, as the flames have grown so large that they have created clouds that can cause lightning and high winds, which in turn can serve to fuel the fire, according to experts.

Around 5,400 firefighters have been struggling to contain the inferno, which was just 22 percent contained as of Monday morning, the California fire and forestry’s department reported.

“If these clouds get tall enough, they do have the potential to produce lightning,” warned Julia Ruthford, a government meteorologist assigned to the blaze.

Wildfires are common in the state, but this summer has been particularly incendiary. Fires have already ravaged three times more vegetation this year than they had at this time in 2020, the worst fire year in California’s history.

Rescue workers have been dispatched from as far away as Florida to help contain the Dixie Fire and its pyrocumulus clouds.

Despite its size — the fire’s circumference stretches at least 82 miles, and it has burned 197,487 acres — it has so far ravaged extremely remote areas, destroying the few dozen homes and small buildings in its path.

Moving along steep slopes, the firefighters sometimes ride a train from which they can spray water on otherwise inaccessible areas. But in these weather conditions, “the embers can really easily travel a mile ahead of the fire,” Rick Carhart, a spokesman for the firefighters, said.

This means places such as the village of Quincy, where evacuees are being housed, are also under threat, he added. Carhart also told the media that at times firefighters have been forced to carry their tools and hike through the rugged terrain.

“It has been burning in extremely steep canyons, some places where it is almost impossible for human beings to set foot on the ground to get in there,” he told a local CBS affiliate. “It’s going to be a long haul.” “It’s been hard watching it relentlessly moving through our forested lands,” Peggy Moak, resident of a nearby village, said.

The infernos in California and neighboring Oregon have come unusually early in the fire season, driven by the multi-year drought, gusty winds, and a scorching start to the summer that experts have linked to climate change.

Related News:

Loss of life from India floods landslides rises to 127

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