By 2020, as a result of California s recent extreme environmental and social policies the state lost 4 3 million acres to wildfires
Epic events like the Southern California wildfires do not have a singular cause. While we don’t yet know the official causes of the fires, we do know that the weather and climate conditions when they started made for a perfect storm for the rapid spread of the flames.
Santa Ana winds return to Southern California from Monday to Tuesday, once again raising fire danger concerns.
Santa Ana winds will continue whipping through Southern California through Thursday, sparking fears that progress made fighting wildfires that have scorched over 40,000 acres and left 28 dead could be reversed and more blazes could break out.
Los Angeles is once again ablaze, and like clockwork, the media is eager to pin the blame on climate change. Coverage from outlets like Newsweek, Axios, and Sky News frame the fires as harbingers of a “climate apocalypse.
Epic events like the Southern California ... wildfires broke out like they did in 2011. A more normal rainfall amount from October to December of that year may have helped avoid the same disaster ...
The fires began on Jan. 7, 2025, what seemed like a regular Tuesday morning, fueled by historic gusts of Santa Ana winds.
As critical fire weather continues to strike in Southern California, crews are also tasked with preparing for a storm expected this weekend that could trigger mudslides in burn scar areas.
A brush fire erupted amid powerful winds Wednesday afternoon in the Castaic area in the northern region of Los Angeles County, spreading quickly to 10,176 acres near the freeway, officials said.
About a third of US homes are in a wildland-urban interface, a kind of high-risk area where development meets open land.
By Katherine Zehnder Raleigh, NC – his week the North Carolina Fire Service rated the state’s Piedmont, Sandhills, and Coastal Plains areas as “high risk” for fire. State fire officials say that persistent drought and dry air makes fire fuel,
Man might be moving the needle a tad by the usual greenhouse gas emissions culprits, but what is driving the tsunami of late when it comes to wildfires is man ignoring long-term climate conditions in play for centuries and being stone deaf to the environment where we build. People have to live somewhere.