Kuwait Times

California wildfires

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LOS ANGELES: It’s been a week since southern California has been charred by a devastatin­g wave of wildfires, blasted by almost hurricane force winds. Vast areas have been destroyed, hundreds of thousands of people have been evacuated and thousands of firefighte­rs are working around the clock. The future of the infernos is at the mercy of the wind. The biggest concern is Thomas, which broke out last Monday and has already destroyed an area five times larger than the US capital Washington and threatens Pacific coast towns like Carpinteri­a, Summerland and Montecito. Here is a review of the present situation.

Number of fires

Six were registered during the week: in addition to Thomas, in Ventura County, there were three in Los Angeles (Creek, Rye, Skirball), Lilac in San Diego; and Liberty in Riverside. Other than Thomas, almost all are contained and the evacuation orders have already been lifted. But there have been long hours of panic. Los Angeles evacuated 150,000 people. Skirball - 85 percent controlled-affected the exclusive neighborho­od of Bel-Air and millions of dollars of mansions were caught in the flames. The losses have not yet been calculated. Lilac, which engulfed a rural area with many stables, forced hundreds of horses had to be evacuated. Just over two dozen perished.

Extent of Thomas’ damage

It still remains to be seen how much harm Thomas will do. The fire continues to grow and threatens nearby areas. In one week it wiped out 23,000 acres (93,000 hectares) and “severe weather conditions” could lead to “significan­t growth,” according to the latest California firefighte­rs bulletin (Cal Fire). More than 800 buildings have been destroyed, including 644 homes, while almost 6,400 officials work to try to contain the flames. Evacuation orders remain standing in areas of Ventura, Ojai, Carpinteri­a, Montecito and Santa Barbara.

Victims

Despite its hellish intensity, which has left behind scenes reminiscen­t of a moonscape in many areas, authoritie­s so far have reported one fatality-a 70-year-old woman who died in a car accident while fleeing from the flames in the Thomas area. Tens of thousands had to leave their homes, some ending up in shelters opened by the authoritie­s and the Red Cross.

Weather forecast

The causes of the fires are under investigat­ion. But whatever they are, it is the hurricane-strength winds and the low humidity that cause them to spread over huge areas of land at an amazingly alarming speed. Eric Boldt, a meteorolog­ist at the National Weather Service (NWS), explained to AFP that even when the wind dies down, the drought conditions complicate everything. The fire is already the biggest disaster in California’s history, but Boldt believes he has the potential to climb to the top spot. Financial losses

There is no exact figure for the losses from this fire wave that has not even ended. The California Department of Insurance told AFP that the calculatio­n is the product of the figures from insurance companies. As the fires are not over yet, there are people who do not even know if they lost their homes or businesses and did not activate their insurance.

 ?? —AFP ?? CALIFORNIA: A man watches the Thomas Fire in the hills above Carpinteri­a, California.
—AFP CALIFORNIA: A man watches the Thomas Fire in the hills above Carpinteri­a, California.

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