Muscat Daily

Wildfires rage across million acres as heat wave stifles US, Canada

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Los Angeles, US - Wildfires were burning across more than one million acres of the western United States and Canada on Monday, as scorching temperatur­es held their grip on areas reeling from a brutal weekend heat wave.

Some 850,000 acres were on fire in the United States - mainly in western states such as Oregon, California and Arizona - while more than 300,000 acres smoldered in Canada's British Columbia alone, according to wildfire officials.

After a brief lull from late June’s previous heat wave, extreme temperatur­es in recent days reached as far inland as the edge of the Rocky Mountains - part of a dramatic trend that experts attribute directly to climate change.

The US National Weather Service (NWS) warned dangerous temperatur­es were continuing in the region for the early part of the week, with temperatur­es up to 47°C recorded in southern

California on Monday, and a heat advisory issued for communitie­s outside Los Angeles.

The NWS said overall temperatur­es were beginning to dip, with breezes arriving in northern California and storms in Arizona and New Mexico on Monday, but excessive heat warnings remained in effect "for most areas through Tuesday evening."

Particular­ly high overnight temperatur­es have robbed many heat-struck regions of muchneeded respite, and more sweltering forecasts lie in store for the coming days.

‘Luckily the hot spots will start cooling down after today. Enjoy it while it lasts because we are looking at more heat starting this weekend,’ tweeted the NWS Los Angeles service.

Wildfires raging

Across the border, temperatur­es of around 36.6°C - well above seasonal norms - were recorded on Monday north of Vancouver in British Columbia, where some 300 wildfires were active across the Canadian province.

In California - where more than twice as many acres have burned this year compared to the same point in 2020’s recordbrea­king season - a large fire near Lake Tahoe expanded on Monday, spurred by the heat, increased winds, low humidity and dry vegetation.

A combinatio­n of two blazes sparked by lightning last week, the Beckwourth Complex fire, has rapidly grown to some 90,000 acres.

Large areas of forest have burned, with reports of homes destroyed in multiple towns and footage from the area showing burnt-out, abandoned cars and buildings.

As the state enters what are traditiona­lly its most dangerous months for wildfires, evacuation orders were also issued for the River Fire, which began on Sunday just south of the Yosemite National Park.

In the neighbouri­ng state of Oregon, the even larger Bootleg Fire more than tripled in size since Friday, reaching more than 150,000 acres and threatenin­g power supplies to California.

Two firefighte­rs were killed in an aviation accident in Arizona.

Climate change

The hot weather follows an earlier heat wave that struck the same regions at the end of June.

A study by a group of leading climate scientists found that those conditions would have been ‘virtually impossible’ without human-caused climate change.

The World Weather Attributio­n group said that global warming, caused by greenhouse gas emissions, made the June heat wave at least 150 times more likely to happen.

The scorching conditions saw the all-time record daily temperatur­e broken three days in a row in British Columbia.

Last month was the hottest June on record in North America, according to data released by the European Union’s climate monitoring service.

Human activity has driven global temperatur­es up, stoking increasing­ly fierce storms, extreme heat waves, droughts and wildfires.

The World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on and Britain’s Met Office said in May there was a 40 per cent chance of the annual average global temperatur­e temporaril­y surpassing 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial temperatur­es within the next five years.

 ?? (AFP) ?? This file photo shows two plumes of smoke from wildfires in Long Loch and Derickson Lake areas of Canada's westernmos­t province of British Columbia, on June 30
(AFP) This file photo shows two plumes of smoke from wildfires in Long Loch and Derickson Lake areas of Canada's westernmos­t province of British Columbia, on June 30

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