The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Wildfires could be even worse this year

- By Brian K. Sullivan and Mark Chediak

As blame for California’s wildfires rises over Sacramento like smoke froml ast year’s blazes, the state is being forced to confront the possibilit­y that it will happen again in 2018.

California’s drought is worsening, and blazes have charred more acres in the first six months of this year than they did in the same period in 2017, a year that ultimately set records for deaths and destructio­n. The state is covered with driedout brush and the skeletal branches of 129 million trees killed by a bark-beetle infestatio­n. Hundreds of miles of electric transmissi­on lines run through the dead forests and crisscross hills crowned with golden, dried grass.

More than 85 percent of the California’s natural landscape is abnormally dry, according to data through July 10 from the U.S. Drought Monitor in Lincoln, Nebraska. Drought now covers over 44 percent of the state. That’s not good news for California­ns still recovering from one of the worstever years for wildfires.

“It’s mirroring last year,” Scott McLean, deputy chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said in a telephone interview. “Grass and brush are just tinder, they are like a fuse for these wildfires.”

Last year’s fires consumed wine grapes, hurt avocados and some of thestate’s exten- sive citrus groves. If flames were to erupt across California’s Central Valley, a variety of crops would be endangered. California farms and ranches produced more than $47 billion in agricultur­al products in 2015, according to the state’s Department of Food and Agricultur­e.

The blazes put California’s electric utilities in the crosshairs, with PG&E Corp. and Southern California Edison facing massive liabilitie­s if their equipment ignited the wildfires. State investigat­ors have so far linked PG&E equipment to 16 of a swarm of fires that swept through Northern California wine country in October, causing $10 billion in insured losses. Forty-four deaths occurred in the wine country fires.

The utilities are taking steps to prevent another disaster. After last year, regulators ordered them to clear branches and trees farther away from overhead power lines. State lawmakers are also considerin­g a package of bills that would improve disaster planning, add emergency- response resources and require utility safety plans.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? With the droughtwor­sening in California and 129 million trees dead froma bark-beetle infestatio­n, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection­worries about wildfires yet to come.
CONTRIBUTE­D With the droughtwor­sening in California and 129 million trees dead froma bark-beetle infestatio­n, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection­worries about wildfires yet to come.

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