Houston Chronicle Sunday

Calif. endured threemonth­s of record heat

- By Hayley Smith

LOS ANGELES — In the midst of the state’s most destructiv­e wildfire season, California shattered temperatur­e records in August, September and October.

All three months were the state’s warmest on record, according to a new report by UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain.

“The long-term warming trend during the peak of fire season in California has been especially pronounced,” Swain said on Twitter, “and 2020 really puts an exclamatio­n point on that.”

In August, a ferocious heat wave saw temperatur­es in Death Valley reach a blistering 130 degrees — thought to be the highest temperatur­e on Earth in nearly a century, if not ever. Temperatur­es in September and October, too, skyrockete­d to new heights. Over Labor Day weekend, Woodland Hills clocked the hottest official temperatur­e on record in Los Angeles County, 121 degrees.

In October, a heat wave prompted a statewide flex alert as Southern California sawtempera­tures asmuch as 25 degrees above normal.

“There were nearly 400 daily high temperatur­e records broken across California in September,” said Karin Gleason, a meteorolog­ist with the National Centers for Environmen­tal Informatio­n at the National Oceanic andAtmosph­eric Administra­tion. “In October, approximat­ely 300 daily high temperatur­e records were set.”

Gleason attributed the warming trend to a persistent ridge of high pressure across the Western U.S. that allowed for scant cloud cover, little to no rainfall and plenty of sunshine. She said it’s a trend that is likely to continue in years to come.

“In a warming climate, we expect to see more record warm temperatur­es broken than we may have seen in the past,” she said. “It is expected to become more commonplac­e.”

Similar records were set in Nevada, Arizona, Utah and Oregon, Swain said.

The sizzling heat was met with dangerous dryness. Precipitat­ion was close to zero across California in September and October, and

two-thirds of the state is inmoderate to extreme drought conditions, Gleason said.

Experts say the combinatio­n of the two extremefac­tors— dryness and heat — helped pave the way for an unpreceden­ted wildfire season in the state. More than 4 million acres have burned in California, fed by large swaths of bone-dry vegetation that acted as fuel for hungry flames.

Christine McMorrow, spokeswoma­n for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said increasing global temperatur­es also created an earlier spring, which has resulted in a fire season that is about 75 days longer than it was 50 years ago.

“We’ve got a longer period of time that our vegetation starts to grow and dry out,” McMorrow said. “By the time we get to … August, September and October, which are the height of fire season, the fuels have had thatmuch more time to dry.”

Six of the 20 largest wildfires in California history have burned this year, according to Cal Fire,

and at least 31 people have died in the blazes.

Record heat and dryness in the late summerand early fallwere also factors in poor air quality, as wildfires spewed smoke and ash into California’s atmosphere. Residents up and down the West Coast experience­d Martian-red skies, layers of ash and soot and health advisories urging people to stay inside with doors and windows shut — a particular challenge for a pandemic-stricken population desperate for time outside.

In August, wildfires created a plume of smoke that spanned more than 1,000 miles, large enough to be seen fromspace and forceful enough to reach all the way to Europe.

And in October, gusty winds carried residue from wildfire burn scars into the L.A. region, creating, at one point, the worst air quality in the nation.

The monthslong sauna of heat, smoke and dryness was enough to push some California­ns to rethink their future in the state.

“My teens are now sending me homes on Zillow out of the area,” said one Santa Rosa resident during the Sonoma County fires in September. “We are all in some form of therapy. My 6-year-old needs me to hold her when she smells smoke.”

The National Weather Service said conditions are expected to change this weekend, when Southern California will experience a notable cooldown and its first chance at rain in several months.

Although the forecast may offer some relief, experts said California­ns shouldn’t get too comfortabl­e.

“Certainly, if you were going to say the next 10 years are going to be warmer than the last 10 years, you’d probably have a decent shot (at being right),” said Mike Halpert, deputy director of NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center.

Halpert said this year’s winter outlook favors “a continuati­on of above-average temperatur­es and also general below-average precipitat­ion.”

But he said that while overall trends are pointing towardwarm­ing, seasonal and subseasona­l variabilit­y can allow for fluctuatio­ns that make it challengin­g to speak in finite terms.

“The easiest forecast I can make for sure is that the 2021 annual global temperatur­e will be above average,” he said. “That’s certainly going to be correct.”

Some California­ns don’t know how much more they can take.

“Summer has become increasing­ly miserable, and if I am ever lucky enough to afford a house, it might just burn down,” said Cassie Elliott, a Los Angeles resident.

Elliott said the state’s increasing extreme weather makes a future in California seem like a poor investment. She is considerin­g relocating to Washington or Oregon.

“Thinking ofmoving makesme very sad, because I love Los Angeles and California in general,” Elliott said, “but fleeing to locations with more stable water supplies and cooler temperatur­es seems necessary.”

 ?? Watchara Phomicinda / Associated Press ?? A snow chain installer assists a vehicle near Running Springs, Calif., on Saturday. After months of hot weather that fueled immense wildfires, the first thundersto­rm of the season brought rain, cooler temperatur­es and light snow to parts of the state.
Watchara Phomicinda / Associated Press A snow chain installer assists a vehicle near Running Springs, Calif., on Saturday. After months of hot weather that fueled immense wildfires, the first thundersto­rm of the season brought rain, cooler temperatur­es and light snow to parts of the state.

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