News

Giant California fire fits a pattern: Rising risks, human causes

Northern California’s Park Fire, now the largest active fire in the United States, has scorched nearly 370,000 acres since it began on July 24 – signaling hard lessons facing vulnerable regions of the American West. 

Thousands of residents have been ordered to evacuate in four counties – including Butte County, where the 2018 Camp Fire killed 85 people and destroyed more than 18,000 homes and other structures. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

California is wrestling with a giant wildfire in a year that’s already seen five times the annual average of acres burned in the state. Solutions may require changes in strategy and expectations.

The Park Fire has moved swiftly, with high winds funneling flames through steep mountain terrain, and triple-digit temperatures exacerbating intense heat. Already it’s among the largest wildfires in California history. 

The state is wrestling to control the situation, but with rising costs and growing humility. 

“It’s a big fire. We don’t typically get them this early in the fire season,” notes Capt. Dan Collins with Cal Fire, as California’s Department of Forestry and Fire Protection is called. “We’ve already had 10 to 11 incident management team deployments in Cal Fire so far this year. We’re not even in August yet.”

Northern California’s Park Fire, now the largest active fire in the United States, has scorched nearly 370,000 acres, or 580 square miles, since it began July 24 – signaling hard lessons facing vulnerable regions of the American West. 

Thousands of residents have been ordered to evacuate in four counties – including Butte County, where the 2018 Camp Fire killed 85 people and destroyed more than 18,000 homes and other structures. Officials lifted some of those evacuation orders Monday morning. 

As the wildfire presses north and the state wrestles to control the outbreak, the fire’s magnitude – and the resources needed to bring it under control – reinforce a growing humility and respect for nature’s force. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

California is wrestling with a giant wildfire in a year that’s already seen five times the annual average of acres burned in the state. Solutions may require changes in strategy and expectations.

“It’s a big fire. We don’t typically get them this early in the fire season,” notes Capt. Dan Collins with Cal Fire, as California’s Department of Forestry and Fire Protection is called. “We’ve already had 10 to 11 incident management team deployments in Cal Fire so far this year. We’re not even in August yet.”

The Park Fire moved swiftly in its first few days last week, with high winds funneling flames through steep mountain terrain, and triple-digit temperatures exacerbating already intense heat. As of Monday morning, the fire was 12% contained, with nearly 5,000 emergency personnel working to suppress it, helped by the weekend’s cooler weather and increased humidity. 

Human causes and consequences

Officials have arrested and charged a man with starting the fire – now the sixth-largest wildfire in California’s history – in a year that’s seen five times the five-year average of acres burned in this state so far. 

Previous ArticleNext Article