The Guardian (USA)

California's wildfire hell: how 2020 became the state's worst ever fire season

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On a deadly 24-hour march through the Sierra Nevadain September, the flames of what would become the North Complex fire raced through more than 200,000 acres of dense timber, destroyed a historic schoolhous­e and overtook a beloved camp for children with cancer.

Also in its path was the remote settlement of Berry Creek, where Daniel Salazar, 27, found himself once again facing an unpreceden­ted, out of control blaze. Less than two years earlier, Salazar had escaped the Camp fire, which killed his grandparen­ts and 83 others in and around the town of Paradise.

In the Sierra Nevada and across California in late summer and early fall this year, firefighte­rs and residents fought a losing battle against impossibly fast and ferocious blazes.

It was the state’s worst wildfire season on record. By the end of it, the flames had killed 31 people, destroyed or damaged more than 10,000 buildings and burned a staggering 4.1m acres. The North Complex fire was responsibl­e for more than 300,000 acres of scorched land, killing 16 people in its wake.

“There’s almost no statistic or dimension of this fire season 2020 in California that wasn’t astonishin­g or horrifying,” said Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at UCLA’s Institute of the Environmen­t and Sustainabi­lity. “Everything about this year has been kind of unusual or extraordin­ary.”

It wasn’t just the number of fires – according to Cal Fire there were nearly 10,000 incidents this year – but the scale at which they burned. Five of the six largest blazes in the state were recorded in 2020.The4.1m acres that burned double the previous annual record. The August Complex fire grew to more than 1m acres, entering a new classifica­tion: the gigafire.

There was the timing. An unusual lightning storm in mid-August, ahead of the usual peak of the fire season in the fall, caused hundreds of small blazes, some of which eventually merged into massive ones.

The impacts were difficult to escape. For weeks, thick smoke hung overhead for hundreds of miles, making air quality in some areas among the worst in the world. San Francisco Bay area skies had an unsettling orange glow for several days. Stanford researcher­s estimate that the smoke and resulting poor air quality eventually led to hundreds of excess deaths in California cities and across the west coast in Washington and Oregon, which also faced a devastatin­g fire season.

“A lot of the news coverage focuses on immediate danger: people with homes in harm’s way,” said Marshall Burke, an associate professor in the department of earth system science at Stanford. “The impacts are much, much larger than that … they extend all over the place to people hundreds of miles away from wildfire.”

California is a landscape adapted for flames. Fires, set intentiona­lly by Native Americans or sparkedby lightning, burned as many as 4.5m acres of the state each year before European colonizati­on. But decades of fire suppressio­n policy removed it from the landscape, causing forests to grow denser and brushier than they had been before, creating forests that burn more severely.

“We know that California has been running this massive fire deficit and when the bill comes due you pay it,” said Crystal Kolden, a fire scientist at UC Merced.

At the same time, the climate crisis is making the state increasing­ly hot – it recorded what is probably the hottest ambient temperatur­e on Earth in Death Valley in late summer and August and September were the hottest on record – and dry, leading to more extreme fire behavior.

“As shocking as it is even to me personally, it’s not scientific­ally surprising because we know what happens when the climate warms and the landscape aridifies … it’s unfortunat­ely simple … vegetation burns hotter and more readily,” Swain said.

The August lightning storm that sparked dozens of blazes, coupled with a sweltering heatwave, worsened a season that scientists knew would be bad. The blazes burned for weeks until they eventually exploded in hot temperatur­es and fierce winds, leading to a series of conflagrat­ions in the Plumas national forest that came to comprise the North Complex, which overtook Daniel Salazar’s family home, a three-bedroom residence on a fiveacre plot with a backyard that was “nothing but forest”.

“We had fire-prepped for so long … making fire breaks around the property, making sure the yard was clean,” Salazar said in September. “The way that the winds were going … we had 75mph winds that day. We didn’t have a fighting chance with this one.”

Salazar had lived in wildfire country his whole life, but didn’t expect a blaze of that scale so soon after the Camp fire leveled his hometown, Paradise.

“It’s just one nightmare that seems like it keeps on going,” Salazar said. “They’re different fires, they move quick, they burn incredibly hot to the point where they swallow whole towns up.”

This year’s fires alsodestro­yed groves of ancient redwoods, giant se

quoias and more than 1m Joshua trees. These are eco-system changing fires, Swain said, worsening at such a rate that human solutions are struggling to keep up.

“The velocity of real world change is outpacing the kind of interventi­ons that are emerging. The wildfire crisis is getting ahead of us,” Swain said. “We’re just sort of stumbling over ourselves, moving from one crisis to the next.”

Covid-19 complicate­d firefighti­ng efforts – limiting vital operations to clear out vegetation and reducing the state’s team of essential inmate firefighte­rs as outbreaks of the illness swept California prisons.

But, scientists say, there were silver linings. The conversati­on around fire management is being reframed, Kolden said, and there is greater support around the need for fire in the landscape.Parts of some fires were an ecological good, she added, clearing out woody debris left after the drought and removing excess fuel in the forest. While there was loss of life, the state avoided a mass casualty event on the scale of the Camp fire, which killed 85, or the 2017 fires that left nearly 50 dead.

And despite all the loss and destructio­n, Kolden saw first-hand the impact of successful forest management, which helped some areas burn at a lower intensity, and ultimately, survive.

“Climate change is making it more and more likely that we’re going to have extreme fire behavior and the potential for destructiv­e fire, but what these success stories tell us is despite the extreme conditions, we can still live with fire.”

 ?? Photograph: Noah Berger/AP ?? Firefighte­rs watch the Bear fire, a smaller blaze that became part of the North Complex fire, approach in Oroville, California, on 9 September.
Photograph: Noah Berger/AP Firefighte­rs watch the Bear fire, a smaller blaze that became part of the North Complex fire, approach in Oroville, California, on 9 September.
 ?? Photograph: Peter Dasilva/EPA ?? The remnants of a property destroyed by the Bear fire, one of the fires that made up the North Complex fire, in Berry Creek, California.
Photograph: Peter Dasilva/EPA The remnants of a property destroyed by the Bear fire, one of the fires that made up the North Complex fire, in Berry Creek, California.

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