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New wildfire out of control in northern California

2021-08-18T21:01:19.047Z


A wildfire that broke out in the capital region of California just a few days ago was getting out of hand ...


A wildfire that broke out in California's capital region just days ago was spiraling out of control on Wednesday after having already covered nearly 215 km2.

Read alsoClimate crisis: the Earth continues to burn this summer

At least two victims had to be taken to hospital by helicopter after the blaze, dubbed Caldor Fire, devastated a small town about 80 km from Sacramento in the state's north. Thousands of residents were preparing to flee the advancing flames that have ravaged the Eldorado National Forest since August 14, thanks to extreme drought and sustained winds.

"Please, please listen to the warnings, and when you are asked to evacuate, go!"

Pleaded California Fire Chief Thom Porter as quoted by the

Sacramento Bee

newspaper.

.

"

We need you not to be in our paws to be able to protect your houses from these fires"

, he insisted.

The fire increased its surface area eightfold in the space of 24 hours and was not at all contained Wednesday morning, according to the latest report established by the firefighters.

One fire among dozens of others

The Caldor Fire is just one of dozens of blazes ravaging the chronic drought-stricken western United States further exacerbated by the effects of climate change. Further north, the Dixie Fire continued to burn for more than a month after it left. Despite more than 6,000 firefighters mobilized, the disaster was only 33% contained. It consumed more than 2,500 km2 - an area equivalent to that of Luxembourg - making it the second fire in California history. Images taken by an AFP photographer bear witness to the height of the flames engulfing the trees along a road where firefighters are trying to stop their progress. Too late for the small town of Janesville, lined with charred car wrecks.

Read alsoSummer fires: was it predictable?

Thick fumes from the multiple forest fires triggered an air quality alert for residents of the San Francisco area, while energy supplier PG&E had to cut power to some 50,000 customers on Tuesday. .

The operator, blamed for the Dixie Fire, explained that this measure was intended to prevent power lines from causing new fires if they fell on dry vegetation like straw.

The number and intensity of forest fires have increased in recent years in the western United States, with a marked extension of the fire season. According to experts, this phenomenon is particularly linked to global warming: the increase in temperature, the increase in heat waves and the drop in precipitation in places form an ideal incendiary cocktail.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2021-08-18

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