Hot, dry temperatures and increased fire risk are expected to continue throughout California through at least December, Cal Fire Chief Thom Porter warned Tuesday.
With roughly 2 million acres already burned across California this year, the state is on pace with the number of acres burned at this time last year, according to Porter, who described the fires of the last two years as “the new reality.”
“Some have turned to looking forward as if this is now fall, summer season is over,” Porter said, referencing Labor Day weekend as the traditional but unofficial end of summer. “We’re right smack in the middle of wildfire peak season.”
Ultimately, some 4 million acres burned across the state in 2020.
Porter said that while “nobody has a crystal ball” to predict how many acres will burn in 2021, a recent three-month outlook from Cal Fire’s weather forecasters showed consistently dry conditions, more wind events and additional fires.
Nearly 15,000 firefighters and emergency personnel and nearly 1,300 military personnel are battling the state’s ongoing fires.
State officials are also proceeding with hazardous waste and fire debris cleanup efforts via the California Office of Emergency Services’ Consolidated Debris Removal Program, which coordinates with county governments to clean up fire debris for free.
Hazardous material and debris removal has already begun in counties affected by the Tamarack Fire, the Beckwourth Fire, the Dixie Fire, the Lava Fire, the Cash Fire and the River Fire.
According to Cal OES Director Mark Ghilarducci, the debris removal program is also set to begin in the South Lake Tahoe areas affected by the Caldor Fire, which has burned more than 216,000 acres and is 49 percent contained, as of Tuesday.
Ghilarducci noted that residents who begin their own debris removal process without first checking with their county could make them ineligible for the state’s cleanup services.
State and federal officials advised residents to remain alert for potential fires in their area in the coming months and be ready to evacuate, if necessary.
“We need everybody in California to keep their eyes open,” Porter said. “See smoke — call it in, don’t expect somebody else already did. And if you get evacuation orders, get out so we can do our job of protecting lives, property and the environments.”
Here is the problem.
“We need everybody in California to keep their eyes open,” Porter said. “See smoke — call it in, don’t expect somebody else already did.
Why even bring it up.No matter what the public thinks or says it will happen.The politicians will have there pockets lined with cash.They will live happily ever after.
Agreed
Sorry put comment on wrong article.
Still a great statement.
Wait a sec… there has never been ANY forecasters that have even predicted Ca weather with any reliability further out than a week and they are saying what the rest of 2021 will do?
What a crock of crap!
“Hot, dry weather…expected”
This isn’t a weather forecast? Every time I think you can’t out do your own ignorance, you surprise me.
I trust the Farmers Alminac.
If you go to:
https://www.windy.com
you can see the problem. There is plenty of offshore wind that could be cooling or bringing us traditional weather. But those winds have been staying offshore as if controlled somehow.
@Captain Bebops….Just go ahead and say it… “geo-engineering” or “chemtrails’, which conspiracy do you refer? No shortage of believers here that share your harebrained lunacy.
Captain—We are having traditional weather. Early September is usually the hottest time of the year.
Looks like we have two here who didn’t do their homework. 😀
And BTW, windy.com is not a conspiracy site. It’s a real cool realtime map of wind patterns throughout the world.
Yea climate change is real, it started getting warmer after the last ice age..
It must of; been all the humans and factories that started it all millions of years ago right….
BY THE WAY IT SAID “HOT DRY WEATHER” ABOVE FOR REST OF 2021! I CALL THAT A FORECAST.
Go bark up some other tree about climate changes that have been going on for millions of years…
I trust the Farmers Alminac.
Try the Farmers Almanac. Contrast and compare.