WORLD / AMERICAS
California braces for high winds that could propel deadly wildfires
Published: Sep 17, 2020 03:13 PM

A vehicle and a statue are destroyed in deadly wildfires raging across Oregon, US. The wildfires, which started in August, caused the deaths of at least 27 people as of Saturday morning. More than half a million people are under evacuation orders. Photo: VCG

California faces more devastation from wildfires that have ravaged the West Coast, authorities warned Wednesday, with strong winds and dry heat expected to whip up flames from dozens of blazes raging across the state.

Governor Gavin Newsom said although firefighters had made progress in their battle to contain more than two dozen major wildfires, so-called Santa Ana winds could fuel the relentless blazes.

"With wind events that we are experiencing currently and what we anticipate over the coming days, we have to be mindful that even with high containment numbers, those fires are anything but behind us," he told a press briefing in a statement.

Highlighting the scale of the unfolding catastrophe, Newsom said the state so far has experienced 7,606 fires in 2020 as opposed to 4,972 in 2019.

He said the flames have devoured nearly 2.3 million acres - 1.5 million of them since mid-August - as opposed to 118,000 in 2019.

"These numbers bear fruit to that assertion that this is historic," he said.

Newsom also appeared to hit out at US President Donald Trump, who visited the state earlier this week, saying he had "no patience for climate change deniers" who reject mounting scientific evidence that extreme weather events are linked to global warming.

Trump during his visit downplayed climate concerns over the wildfires, saying that global warming will reverse on its own.

"The scale and magnitude of these fires are at a level much higher than any of the 18 years that our monitoring data covers" since 2003, Mark Parrington, senior scientist and wildfire expert at Europe's Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS), noted in a statement. 

He added that the fires are emitting so much pollution that thick smoke was visible over 8,000 kilometers away in northern Europe, underscoring the devastation of the blazes.

The heaviest smoke from the fires remains over the US West Coast, with cities like Los Angeles and San Francisco registering some of the worst air quality in the world.

AFP