Without the much-needed rain, vegetation in Orange County has dried out to a crisp, which fueled Wednesday night’s fast-moving Coastal Fire. Meteorologists told CNN that the winds weren’t even particularly strong.
“I could have called it breezy,” South said. “But it wasn’t the typical, Santa Ana situation where they would get the screaming easterly winds like they usually do, that causes fires to rapidly spread in Southern California.”
사실로, the winds that helped spread the fire were blowing in from the Pacific Ocean, which means they were cool and humid.
“The humidity was high, which isn’t necessarily optimal to get that kind of burning,” said Greg Martin, a meteorologist at NWS San Diego. “I was really surprised when I saw the smoke plume yesterday evening on my commute and wondered what was burning.
“That was not what I would have thought would be an ideal situation, and yet we had a substantial fire.”
Scientists recently reported the West’s multi-year megadrought is the most extreme in 1,200 연령,
and has been made 72%
worse by human-caused climate change.
Reservoirs in California,
Nevada and Arizona —
sources of water for tens of millions of people —
are draining rapidly after a dry winter.
Wildfires have historically peaked in the late summer and fall in California. 그러나 지금, instead of a fire season, officials in are increasingly pointing to a “fire year,” where wildfires occur in any month.
“We’ve stopped talking about fire seasons,” Issac Sanchez, Cal Fire’s battalion chief of communications, CNN에 말했다. “The implication of that term is if we’re in fire season there’s a time of year when we’re not in fire season. That’s just not the case in California anymore.”
While Sanchez said Wednesday’s fire is “
historically speaking, 별난,”
it’s not even the first unusual fire this year. 1 월, 그만큼
Colorado Fire burned 687
acres in Monterey County.
“It’s a result of climate change, it’s a result of the drought we’re seeing,” Sanchez said. “The Coastal Fire is a graphic example that you don’t need thousands of acres burned to impact you.”
Sanchez added unless the long-standing drought and dry conditions in the state improve — and do so in a sustained way for years — California fire crews will continue to prepare for the worst-case scenario.
“We’re preparing for the worst,” 그는 말했다. “We have to be prepared for the worst, there is no hoping things get better.”
As firefighters battled the blaze early Thursday morning, Orange County Fire Chief Brian Fennessy pointed to how different this was than what they’ve encountered in the past.
“The fuel beds in this county, throughout Southern California, throughout the West, are so dry that a fire like this is going to be more commonplace,” 그는 말했다. “5 년 전, 10 여러 해 전에, a fire like this would’ve likely been stopped very small.”