The Borneo Post

As winds relent, scorched California hopes for fire relief

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OJAI, United States: Brutal winds that fueled southern California wildfires finally began to ease Saturday, giving residents and firefighte­rs hope for a respite as the destructiv­e toll of the blazes came into focus.

After a five- day siege, some California­ns were finally able to return home to inspect the damage wrought by the wildfires, which forced hundreds of thousands of people to f lee and destroyed more than 850 structures including multimilli­on dollar mansions.

Despite the intensity of the fires that raged on multiple different fronts — stretching from areas north of Los Angeles down to the San Diego region — authoritie­s have reported only one fatality.

With gusts of up to 60 miles per hour ( 95 kilometers per hour), relentless seasonal winds had continued to stoke the fires Friday, spitting embers and creating ‘extreme fire danger’.

“There’s still tons and tons of hot spots out there,” Captain Jon Heggie of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection ( Cal Fire) said early Saturday.

A ‘red flag’ warning issued by the National Weather Service is in effect until 8.00pm Sunday.

The strongest winds are expected in the San Diego County mountains and foothills, with gusts over 60 miles per hour, the NWS predicted.

Winds were expected to calm somewhat but a red alert was extended into Sunday due to expected low humidity.

And despite the easing of the winds, meteorolog­ists warned that smoke and ash could linger, prompting several counties to maintain air- quality warnings.

In the mountain town of Ojai the air- quality index was hovering over 500 — at the top of the “hazardous” scale — as fumes from the ‘ Thomas’ fire hung trapped by the mountains.

Since erupting in Ventura County late Monday, that blaze has seared 155,000 acres ( 60,000 hectares) and destroyed over 500 structures, but an area fire department spokespers­on said Saturday containmen­t should improve “after aggressive fire fighting” the day prior.

Governor Jerry Brown said many scientists believe more extreme fire seasons are part of the pinch of climate change.

“This is kind of the new normal. We’re facing a new reality in this state where fires threatens people’s lives, their property, their neighborho­ods,” Brown said at a fairground­s briefing

“We know from changing climate that ( fires) are going to exacerbate everything else (and) in the longer term, I think we have to think through how are we going to adjust ourselves to nature as it changes,” Brown said, his approach a stark contrast to that of US president Donald Trump, a doubter of climate change.

“We can’t expect nature to adjust to our needs,” Brown added.

The material cost of fire suppressio­n efforts has skyrockete­d to some 17 million, Ventura officials estimated.

The “Skirball” fire — near the aff luent, star- studded Bel Air district — was 75 per cent contained after engulfing entire hillsides in flames and scorching over 400 acres.

Firefighte­rs contained 85 per cent of the ‘ Creek’ fire — the largest blaze that menaced the LA region, which roared through more than 15,000 acres — while the nearby ‘ Rye’ fire, which has burned over 6,000 acres, was 80 per cent contained.

The “Liberty” fire was 100 per cent contained — meaning “a control line has been completed around the fire which can reasonably be expected to stop the fire’s spread” — as of Saturday night, the Murrieta Fire Department said.

California’s state fire agency said “favorable conditions helped make considerab­le progress today” but warned that “residents should remain vigilant as conditions can change quickly.” — AFP

 ??  ?? National Guard helicopter­s make water drop as the Thomas Fire approaches the Lake Casitas area near Ojai, California. — AFP photo
National Guard helicopter­s make water drop as the Thomas Fire approaches the Lake Casitas area near Ojai, California. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Military planes fly during an Iraqi military parade in Baghdad, Iraq. — Reuters photo
Military planes fly during an Iraqi military parade in Baghdad, Iraq. — Reuters photo

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