China Daily

Firefighte­rs gain on major California blazes as heat wave breaks

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LOS ANGELES — A break in the brutal heat wave that has baked California for much of the summer gave firefighte­rs a chance to attack a string of major wildfires across the state that have killed eight people and destroyed thousands of homes.

The cooler temperatur­es, off triple digits across much of Northern California, came during a two-day tour of the area by two Trump administra­tion officials, US Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and US Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue.

The intensity of this year’s fire season, one of California’s worst in more than a decade, showed the need for clearing underbrush and removing dead trees, Zinke told KRCRTV during the visit.

“We have to remove the dead and dying trees and restore health to our forests,” he told the station.

On Monday, authoritie­s said a Utah firefighte­r died battling the largest recorded blaze in California history.

Officials say the man died on Monday night at a hospital after he was injured at the site of the Mendocino Complex fire north of San Francisco. Details haven’t been released. About 110 major wildfires are burning across the western United States and have burned more than 23,000 square kilometers, an area larger than the state of New Jersey, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center.

The conflagrat­ions have forced tens of thousands of people to flee their homes and shuttered national parks.

The Carr Fire, which has blackened about 82,000 hectares and killed eight people in and around Shasta County, north of Sacramento near the Oregon state line, was 61 percent contained as of Monday afternoon, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said.

About 160 kilometers away, crews had cut buffer lines around 68 percent of the largest wildfire recorded in California history, the Mendocino Complex, which has already charred about 344,000 acres.

In Southern California, the Holy Fire, which authoritie­s say was set on Aug 6 by a disgruntle­d homeowner in an Orange County canyon, was 52 percent contained after torching more than 8,900 hectares and destroying a dozen cabins.

The increasing containmen­t was good news but did not necessaril­y mean the wildfire season was dying down, Cal Fire spokesman Cary Wright said.

“A lot of this is determined based on the drought, Mother Nature, what kind of winds we get,” Wright said. “With low humidity, high heat and low moisture, fire season just seems to be getting longer and longer.”

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