by Veronique Dupont
Agence France Presse
LOS ANGELES, United States (AFP) — Crews battling wildfires ravaging southern California for a week have managed to slow the spread of the worst of the blazes, officials said Tuesday, as residents were taking stock of the catastrophic damage.
The biggest “Thomas” fire has charred nearly 95,000 hectares (234,000 acres) of land and is only 20 percent contained, according to the state agency Calfire.
But in the past day or so, that figure has risen by only a thousand hectares. Evacuation orders were issued for threatened areas in the Santa Barbara region about 160 kilometers (100 miles) northwest of Los Angeles.
Nearly 6,400 firefighters have been toiling for a week against blazes fueled by bone dry conditions and powerful winds.
Winds will blow at up to 65 km per hour (40 miles per hour), forecasters said, as public health authorities urged people to wear face masks to protect against ash and smoke.
‘End of an era’
Retired fighter pilot Don Thompson, who has an avocado farm in Carpinteria, near Santa Barbara, described the loss of his recently deceased brother’s house to the blaze as “the end of an era for our family.”
“He built this house himself,” he said pointing to two smoldering stone chimneys that were all that remained.
Half of his family’s avocado orchard was decimated, while thick black smoke persisted Tuesday, limiting visibility to some 50 meters (55 yards).
“There was some tears,” he continued, but admitted that even in the midst of efforts to save their property he had been overawed by the “majesty” of the inferno. “It’s destruction but it’s still nature and it had some beauty,” he said.
Another resident of the area, Ken Coffey, said he would remain at his house on Shepard Mesa Lane. “I may fry but if I have to go, what more honorable way than defending your family’s house?”
“Thomas” is the fifth biggest fire in California’s history, said Eric Boldt, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Los Angeles.
It is the biggest of six blazes that have been burning since last Monday, with the others now more than 90 percent contained.
Altogether, the fires have burned more than 100,000 hectares of land and forced the evacuation of hundreds of thousands of people.
‘Increasingly frequent event’
California’s Governor Jerry Brown, meanwhile, warned the wildfires ravaging his state should serve as a warning for other parts of the world threatened by climate change.
“The important fact is that these fires are going to become a very frequent occurrence, that’s what the science is telling us,” he told AFP on the sidelines of the One Planet Summit, held in Paris.
“It’s a real indicator of bad things to come and hopefully will serve to wake up people who right now are too complacent,” he added.
Experts say that global warming increases the risk of out-of-control blazes by drying out vegetation, making it more inflammable and easily set alight by lightning, spontaneous combustion, or fires lit by humans.
Despite the intensity of the fires, which in many areas have left behind scenes reminiscent of a moonscape, authorities so far have reported one fatality — a 70-year-old woman who died in a car accident while fleeing from the flames in the Thomas area.
Damage from “Thomas” alone is estimated at around $48 million, according to the local TV station ABC7.
This has been California’s deadliest year ever for wildfires. More than 40 people died in October when fires swept through the state’s wine-producing counties north of San Francisco.
© Agence France-Presse