Senior Trump officials survey California fire devastation

Senior members of the Trump administration were due in California today as blazes that have killed at least eight people continued to cut a catastrophic swathe through the country's most populous state.


PTI | Updated: 14-08-2018 04:11 IST | Created: 14-08-2018 02:13 IST
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  • United States

Senior members of the Trump administration were due in California today as blazes that have killed at least eight people continued to cut a catastrophic swathe through the country's most populous state.

Tens of thousands have been forced to flee their homes over the last month, with more than 14 blazes still threatening land and property from south of Los Angeles to the state's border with Oregon.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke - wrapping a two-day tour of the Carr Fire's path to the west of Redding, northern California - will meet rescuers alongside Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue.

Firefighters made progress on the inferno, which has destroyed more than 1,000 homes and other property, over the weekend, according to federal and local government data.

But the 203,000-acre (82,000-hectare) blaze is still less than two-thirds contained after killing eight people and prompting the evacuation of 40,000.

The temperatures have remained in double digits but emergency workers say they are bracing for hotter weather, dry air and gusty winds over the coming days.

Around 130 miles (160 kilometers) southwest of Redding, the Mendocino Complex wildfire, California's largest in history, has scorched 345,000 acres.

The blaze is made up of the Ranch and River fires which were respectively 59 per cent and 93 per cent contained by Monday morning, according to Cal Fire.

Zinke's visit with Perdue comes days after President Donald Trump suggested that California's environmental policies had deprived firefighters of water and left too many trees that could fuel fires.

Some activists have acknowledged that many of the state's forests are too dense and require more aggressive management but Cal Fire officials have stated they have enough water.

Other experts have added that California's most destructive blazes have started in shrublands, not thick forests, and that the devastating fire season has been lengthened by climate change.

Zinke angered activists by downplaying the importance of global warming in wildfire management as he began his California visit on Sunday.

"I've heard the climate change argument back and forth," he said in an interview with television station KCRA 3.

"This has nothing to do with climate change. This has to do with active forest management." Fourteen of California's 20 largest wildfires have started since 2003 -- a period boasting some of the hottest, driest years on record in the US. (AFP) MRJ

MRJ

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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