Houston Chronicle Sunday

Calif.: Stymied climate efforts worsen fires

- By Thomas Fuller and Coral Davenport

SANTA ROSA, Calif. — For the past three years, countries and companies around the world have looked to California as a counterwei­ght to the Trump administra­tion’s aggressive dismantlin­g of efforts to combat climate change.

But this past week, as wildfires burned across the state — fires that scientists said have been made worse by a changing climate — and as at least five large carmakers sided with President Donald Trump’s plan to roll back California’s climate pollution standards, the state’s status as the vanguard of environmen­tal policy seemed at the very least diminished.

The state’s leaders found themselves both witnessing firsthand the effects of climate change and hamstrung to take actions to fight it.

“We’re waging war against the most destructiv­e fires in our state’s history, and Trump is conducting a full-on assault against the antidote,” Gov. Gavin Newsom of California said in an interview.

Trump has taken broad aim at efforts to fight climate change since his first days in office. He has mocked the establishe­d science of human-caused warming as a hoax, turned his pledge to pull the United States out of the Paris climate accord into a campaign rallying cry, and directed the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to roll back nearly every federal policy designed to curb the heat-trapping fossil-fuel pollution that is the chief cause of global warming.

But Trump’s quest to tear down rules that restrict the fossil fuel industry has homed in on California as a particular target. That’s in part because of California’s unique role as a beacon of the nation’s climate change policies: Some signature federal climate change programs Trump seeks to dismantle originated in the state. And since Trump has vowed to pull the United States out of the internatio­nal climate accord, California has actively sought to replicate and link its policies with other countries.

As Newsom sees it, there is a contradict­ion between Trump’s willingnes­s to help fire victims and his refusal to address the underlying reasons for the increasing ferocity of the fires.

“Last night they approved seven additional emergency grants in record time,” Newsom said. “But what’s so insidious, and what’s so remarkable, is that he’s doing everything right to respond to these disasters and everything wrong to address what’s happening to cause them.”

Asked to respond, a White House spokesman, Judd Deere, said California’s leaders “support destructiv­e liberal policies” and have not done enough to manage wildfire risks. “California should focus on its own affairs rather than trying to regulate 49 other states with its big-government policies.”

Experts said that the administra­tion’s efforts to roll back climate policy in California will not lead directly to worse wildfires. But California is the fifth largest economy in the world, and what happens here can reverberat­e and affect national and internatio­nal efforts to halt global warming.

“The seas are rising, diseases are spreading, fires are burning, hundreds of thousands of people are leaving their homes,” Jerry Brown, the former California governor, told a hearing in Washington earlier this week. “California is burning while the deniers fight the standards that can help us all.

“This is life-and-death stuff,” he said.

The most destructiv­e, the deadliest and the largest wildfires in California history have all occurred in the past two years. The

Camp fire, which incinerate­d the town of Paradise in the Sierra foothills, killed 86 people and destroyed nearly 19,000 homes. A year earlier, the Wine Country fires killed more than 40 people and destroyed more than 5,000 homes. The Mendocino Complex fire last year, which burned 460,000 acres, was the largest ever recorded in the state.

The trauma of these fires has kept California­ns in a heightened state of vigilance, sniffing the air for smoke, scanning hilltops for any signs of ignition.

Although the state’s fire agency has recorded about 5,000 fires this year in the area it oversees — about the same as during the same period last year — far fewer acres have burned: less than 100,000 compared with about 600,000 at this point last year.

California has contended for over a century with an annual wildfire season. But scientists have found that climate change — including longer, hotter and drier fire seasons, diminishin­g snowpack and lengthenin­g droughts — have already measurably worsened the size and scale of fires in the western United States. Hotter temperatur­es means drier vegetation, making it more likely to burn.

The 2018 National Climate Assessment — a major scientific report produced by 13 federal agencies — concluded that if greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels continue to increase at current rates, the frequency of severe fires in the west could triple.

The report noted that climate change will also bring more specific threats to California. Increased drought could devastate the state’s farmers, warming waters could close fisheries and spur the growth of toxic algae, and rising seas could inundate the homes of 200,000 California­ns and erode two-thirds of California beaches by 2100.

 ?? Marcus Yam / Tribune News Service ?? Inmate firefighte­rs clear brush to slow down the spread of the Maria Fire on Friday in Santa Paula, Calif. Evacuation orders for Somis were lifted as the fire was 20 percent contained.
Marcus Yam / Tribune News Service Inmate firefighte­rs clear brush to slow down the spread of the Maria Fire on Friday in Santa Paula, Calif. Evacuation orders for Somis were lifted as the fire was 20 percent contained.

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