California now has a ‘gigafire’ after blaze surpasses 1 million acres
The August Complex fire, between San Francisco and the Oregon border, has now burned more acreage than all California fires from 1932 to 1999
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Your support makes all the difference.California has set a grim record with news on Monday that the August Complex fire is large enough to be classified as a ‘gigafire’ after burning through more than a million acres.
The August Complex, between San Francisco and the Oregon border, has destroyed more acreage than all California fires from 1932 to 1999. It was already the largest blaze in state history before it claimed the title.
The 2020 wildfire season has shattered records and been driven by the climate crisis, as state officials have repeatedly pointed out.
"If that’s not proof-point testament to climate change, I don’t know what is,” California Governor Gavin Newsom said on Monday.
The “gigafire” milestone comes as wildfires across California have burned a combined 4 million acres, or 6,250 square miles, since the beginning of the year.
It is more than twice the area that burned in California’s previous historic fires in 2018, and amounts to almost the land mass of Connecticut and Delware combined.
The August complex is the first gigafire in modern history in the state. In 2004, the Taylor Complex in Alaska burned more than 1.3 million acres. The term "gigafire,” was coined by academics to describe the growing presence and scope of massive wildfires.
According to Climate Central, US Forest Service records from the past half-century reveal that the number of large blazes has significantly increased in western states.
The average number of large fires each year - those greater than 1,000 acres - has more than tripled between the 1970s and the 2010s. The area destroyed is on average six times greater in the 2010s than in the 1970s.
“The fire season is 105 days longer than it was in the 1970, and is approaching the point where the notion of a fire season will be made obsolete by the reality of year-round wildfires across the West,” Climate Central stated.
On Monday, fire crews had some luck in battling the Glass Fire in California wine country after the winds calmed.
It helped fire fighters gain some ground over the blaze in Napa Valley’s wine-growing region after an onslaught of heavy gusts and scorching weather kept firefighters on the defensive over the weekend.
No serious injuries have been reported in the eight-day-old Glass Fire, but nearly 1,500 homes and other structures have been lost in Napa and neighboring Sonoma County, including at least two wineries.
The fire erupted on 27 September near the Napa resort town of Calistoga putting some of the region’s 2020 vintage into question.
Additional reporting by Reuters
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