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The Tubbs Fire burned through Santa Rosa, Calif., early Monday morning. A mobile home park was one of the casualties. Credit: Justin Sullivan Getty Images
SANTA ROSA, Calif. — As wildfires
engulf nearly 170,000 acres of Northern California wine country,
questions are swirling about the role of climate change in causing
damage of historic proportions.
The fires, which started late Sunday night in the hills of Napa and
Sonoma counties, quickly ballooned to 22 separate conflagrations in
eight counties, killing at least 21 people by Tuesday evening. The Tubbs
Fire, in Sonoma County, has been responsible for at least 11 deaths so
far, making it the sixth-deadliest fire in state history. Nearly 300
people are still reported missing and 25,000 have been evacuated in
Sonoma County alone, with more than 3,500 homes and businesses
destroyed.
Strong winds were responsible for the fires' quick incursion into
urban areas, but months of record-high temperatures, preceded by heavy
rainfall last winter, also fueled the destructive power of the fire that
burned through the region, climate experts said.
Residents of inland Northern California are now experiencing the
confluence of these trends. The fires are expected to persist for weeks,
until the rainy season begins next month. Strong winds are predicted to
return as soon as tomorrow, giving firefighters a narrow window to get
the blazes under control.
When asked if she thought climate change had contributed to the
fires, Santa Rosa resident Della Littwin was unequivocal. “As my late
husband used to say, 'No swinging dogshit, Sherlock,'” said Littwin, who
was volunteering at a middle school that had been converted to a
shelter. “I call it the way I see it,” she said. “I do not go for any of
this nonsense.”
A chaplain providing emotional support yesterday to about 250
evacuees at the Santa Rosa Veterans Memorial Building said he had no
doubt the fires are a symptom of climate change, which is itself a
harbinger of the “end times” that several religions believe will usher
in a personal or universal age of enlightenment.
“This is it,” said Jerry Jaramillo, a Pentecostal chaplain at Hope
Chapel in Santa Rosa. “A couple weeks ago, we were talking in Bible
study about how things were in Florida and Texas. There's a Scripture
that says in the end times, there's going to be fire. That's where we're
at. We've damaged his space that's beautiful, that he gave us, and
we've just torn it apart.”
Others were more skeptical that climate change played a role. “It was
a confluence of all the worst factors,” said Joan Finkle, an innkeeper
in Kenwood who was evacuated. “I've lived here my whole life. They
always tell us October is the worst.” Superstition was still part of the
narrative, though: “I think Mother Nature's pretty mad at us.”
Temperatures soared in the San Francisco Bay Area in early September,
hitting 106 degrees Fahrenheit in San Francisco, a new record, and 108
in San Rafael, north of the city. It was the warmest summer in more than
100 years of record keeping, said Daniel Swain, a climate scientist
with UCLA: “It beat the previous record by a pretty wide margin.”
Those high temperatures dried out vegetation throughout the area, he
said. While fires are a part of life in California, this one became more
destructive because it had so much dry brush and grassland — fed by
last winter's rains — to burn.
Powerful winds pushed the flames farther, Swain said. Known locally
as the Diablo wind, they're similar to the Santa Ana wind in Southern
California, and they reached an unusually high speed of 79 mph Sunday
night. Coupled with relatively low humidity, the wind patterns quickly
created havoc.
“This is very much a weather-driven fire, but there is definitely a climate component to the overall story, too,” Swain said.
The dead brush and trees were the result not just of this year's hot
temperatures, but also of the state's historic drought, which officially
ended with the rainfall last winter, said LeRoy Westerling, a
management professor at the University of California, Merced's School of
Engineering.
Scientists typically hesitate to say any specific event happened
because of climate change, Westerling said. Yet, he said, “we know that
these events are affected by the weather and the climate and how dry it
is. The climate system has been altered by people ... all the weather
we're experiencing and what's driving these wildfire events is climate
change.”
While this fire devastated part of the San Francisco Bay Area,
wildfire is creating growing problems across the West, Westerling said.
“Everywhere, including California, the number of large fires has been
increasing, and the area burned in them has been increasing, as well,”
he said. Climate models indicate California in years ahead could
experience cycles of droughts followed by heavy rains. That could mean
more destructive fires, the experts said.
“Even in a really wet year, if you get a hot summer, your vegetation is just a tinderbox,” Swain said.
Californians also have been building homes in areas that not long ago
were wildlands, pointed out Ethan Elkind, director of the Climate
Program at the University of California, Berkeley, Center for Law,
Energy & the Environment. That needs to change if the state wants to
adapt to climate change, he said.
“We have to just assume that these fires are going to be more intense
and more frequent,” Elkind said. “We're going to need more defensible
space.” Reprinted from Climatewire with permission from E&E News.
E&E provides daily coverage of essential energy and environmental
news at www.eenews.net.
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