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California wildfires are “historic”

cupid_stunt

Where's the bloody sun?
It's getting scary in California, record-breaking wildfires have displaced 120k, killed seven so far, and many of the fires are spreading uncontrolled, apparently they have destroyed at least tens of thousands of structures, burned through the equivalent acreage of a small state and sent plumes of smoke over several regions, forcing millions indoors during a heat wave.

It must be bad, because even Trump has declared the situation as a "major disaster", and has released federal aid, plus the call has gone out for other states to send help.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said this week will be critical as more than 14,000 firefighters battle 17 major fire complexes, largely in Northern California where wildfires have surrounded the city of San Francisco on three sides, singeing coastal redwoods that have never been burned. The wildfires, all caused by lightning, have been burning for a week.

“We are dealing with different climate conditions that are precipitating in fires the likes we haven’t seen in modern recorded history,” he said Monday.


Is this normal?
Quite the opposite. “It’s hard to even process,” Swain [ a climate scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles ] said.


The lighting storms that started the fires were an odd occurrence in the Bay Area – and the blazes they created are especially tricky to fight. At least in recent history, “most fires in California are started by humans”, explained Crystal Kolden, a fire scientist at UC Merced – sparked by power lines, equipment failures, car accidents and campfires. “And when fires are started by humans, they tend to happen in areas accessible to humans – close to roads and trails,” Kolden explained. “These fires are sometimes easier to spot and report quickly” and quell before they get too big, she said.

The recent lightning sparked many little fires, peppered across rough terrain – too remote for firefights to get to quickly, but also dangerously close to where Californians live. Storms do spark fires in California every year, but most big thunderstorms tend to land over the mountains – the Sierra Nevada, the Klamath Mountains, the Cascade Range, Stephens said. “That the lightning fell so close to urban areas was very unusual.”


Meanwhile, California’s landscape had been left parched by an extraordinarily dry winter and hot springtime and further desiccated by the historic heatwave that immediately preceded the lightning storms, turning vegetation into kindling that helped the little fires grow big and fierce, Swain said. He was struck by images of a vineyard near Vacaville, where flames cut through irrigation lines – which he expected would have broken their path. “I don’t think I’ve seen that before,” he said, noting that it spoke to how dry the landscape was.

Peak fire season is traditionally in the autumn, when volatile offshore winds spread hot embers into infernos. But these fires are growing so quickly that they’re creating their own winds. “These fires are doing such crazy things, they’re moving so fast, and they’re dangerous to approach,” Swain said. “It’s no wonder fire crews are overwhelmed.”


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Serious impacts to major industry are possible. Winds said to've been dying down a little today



 
What a clown, 'the other can't fill the reservoirs', that would be because, err <checks notes>, a fucking drought!

It's even worse than a drought. It's billionaires:

While 40 million Californians suffer through unprecedented drought, one billionaire couple owns a massive share of the state’s water system, largely seized in a series of secretive meetings two decades ago.

That system was largely paid for by the very taxpayers whose water these billionaires hold hostage.

Urban water systems are desperate for water, but in 2023 they’ll receive just 5% of what they requested from the state. Stewart and Lydia Resnick use 150 billion gallons a year...


I could probably come up with a better news source, but I didn't want to post a Forbes article.

Water in the western US has been problematic for decades. They've portioned out lots of water to some places and almost none to others. Worse still, they've allocated more water than currently runs in the Colorado, which supplies most of the water. So you'll see golf courses of the wealthy wasting massive amounts of water while farm crops wither and the homes of poor people go without.
 
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It's even worse than a drought. It's billionaires:




I could probably come up with a better news source, but I didn't want to post a Forbes article.

Water in the western US has been problematic for decades. They've portioned out lots of water to some places and almost none to others. Worse still, they've allocated more water than currently runs in the Colorado, which supplies most of the water. So you'll see golf courses of the wealthy wasting massive amounts of water while farm crops wither and the homes of poor people go without.
This is a truly awesome concept

The new agreement also loosened regulations on “paper water.” That’s water that doesn’t necessarily actually exist anywhere but on paper: the full quantities of water that providers could have, but don’t actually need to have. Today 5x as much water has been promised and sold as actually exists.
 
This is a truly awesome concept

The new agreement also loosened regulations on “paper water.” That’s water that doesn’t necessarily actually exist anywhere but on paper: the full quantities of water that providers could have, but don’t actually need to have. Today 5x as much water has been promised and sold as actually exists.
Like to see them put the fires out with paper water. :hmm: :eek:
 
Tbf, the Mayor's decision to cut the fire department's budget recently and being on a pretty random jaunt to Ghana when the fires started isn't a great look

The first term mayor, who was also blasted for traveling to Ghana as the wildfires ravaged her city, insisted late Wednesday that she was “confident” the budget cuts did not hinder LAFD’s response to the wildfires currently ravaging the region.

She also addressed her glaring overseas absence, claiming she did her best to return and help.

“I took the fastest route back, which included being on a military plane, which facilitated our communications,” Bass said. “So I was able to be on the phone the entire time of the flight.”

 
Musk and similar shitheads are blaming the fires on diversity, because the landscape being exceptionally dry during the Santa Ana winds and water tanks filled to capacity running dry during a massive firefighting incident are apparently somehow connected to the LA fire chief being a lesbian
 
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