Report: California Wildfires Increased Fivefold This Year
According to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, over 3.5K wildfire incidents destroyed nearly 220K acres in California — five times the average — at the start of its wildfire season....
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Facts
- According to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, over 3.5K wildfire incidents destroyed nearly 220K acres in California — five times the average — at the start of its wildfire season.1
- The five-year average for the Western US state's summertime burned area is 38K acres, with California, Nevada, Arizona, and Utah reeling under 'extremely dangerous heat conditions.'2
- Since it broke out on July 5, the Lake Fire near Santa Maria has burned over 20K acres, making it California's largest wildfire this year.3
- Reports indicate the unprecedented blazes have fed on a high quantity of grass that has covered the landscape through a wet winter. The grasses have since dried from the heat.1
- The ongoing heatwave in California has been accompanied by low humidity and strong winds that have worsened the risks of wildfires in parts of the state.4
- According to the European climate service Copernicus, June marked the 13th straight month of record-warm global temperatures.5
Sources: 1Guardian, 2New York Times, 3CBS, 4BBC News and 5KPBS Public Media.
Narratives
- Left narrative, as provided by Los Angeles Times. In California, the end of fire season brings temporary relief. However, climate change is reshaping this relief into a false sense of security. With extreme weather now a year-round threat, the notion of a predictable 'fire season' is outdated. Fire conditions can arise at almost any time, as evidenced by winter wildfires and fires in traditionally lush areas like parts of Louisiana and Hawaii. It's crucial to embrace adaptation, integrate Indigenous knowledge, slash emissions, and push back against climate denialism from the right.
- Right narrative, as provided by FOX News. Blaming California's wildfires on climate change is an easy way out when poor federal regulation and forest mismanagement are the real culprits. The federal government's restrictive policies on forest use have led to excessive fuel buildup, resulting in more severe fires. Leftist eco-imperialism ignores effective forest management practices like logging and controlled burns. Climate alarmism allows the left to use climate change as a scapegoat to cover up its failures.