Global Times

Lighter winds help California battle wildfire

Improving weather conditions could allow firefighte­rs to make progress

-

Lighter winds expected in California early this week should help firefighte­rs in their battle against one of the largest and most destructiv­e wildfires in the state’s history, the National Weather Service has said.

By late on Sunday, more than 8,500 firefighte­rs had contained about 45 percent of the fire in Southern California. Dubbed the Thomas fire, it began December 4 and has scorched 109,000 hectares along the scenic Pacific Coast north of Los Angeles.

Its size is approachin­g that of the 2003 Cedar blaze in San Diego County, the largest wildfire in state history, which consumed 110,578 hectares and caused 15 deaths.

While wind and low humidity will still create dangerous fire conditions, “improving weather conditions should allow firefighte­rs to make progress on the fire on Monday and Tuesday,” the National Weather Service said.

Officials said calmer winds also helped make Sunday one of their most productive days yet battling a blaze that has been fueled by fierce Santa Ana winds sweeping in from eastern California deserts.

“We’re just hoping to make it home for Christmas,” Bakersfiel­d Fire Department Captain Tim Ortiz said Sunday at a recreation center in Santa Barbara serving as a staging area and base camp for more than 3,000 firefighte­rs.

The fire has destroyed more than 1,000 structures and threatened 18,000 others. Centered less than 160 kilometers northwest of downtown Los Angeles, it has forced more than 104,000 people to evacuate or seek shelter.

On Sunday firefighte­rs paid their respects during a funeral procession for Cal Fire engineer Cory Iverson, 32, who died of smoke inhalation and burns on Thursday while battling the flames near the Ventura County community of Fillmore.

So far it has cost $123.8 million to battle the Thomas fire, which has forced many schools and roads to close for days and created poor air quality throughout southern California.

“I’ve seen people who have lost everything,” said Larry Dennis, 60, who sought refuge at a Ventura shelter Sunday after the blaze inundated the region with smoke and turned nearby hillsides red. Several areas of Ventura and Santa Barbara counties also saw evacuation orders lifted Sunday, Cal Fire said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China