A giant fire is spreading at full speed in California

More than 2,500 firefighters were battling the flames of an “explosive” fire on Monday that continued to spread at a still “very rapid” rate in the wooded hills of central California, near the famous Yosemite National Park.

The fire, baptized Oak Firedeclared itself on Friday near the small town of Midpines and had already covered some 6,800 hectares of vegetation according to the latest report available on Monday morning.

Already the biggest Californian forest fire of the season, “it is advancing very quickly and the window of reaction to evacuate people is limited”, explained on CNN Jon Heggie, a Californian firefighter official.

According to the expert, the speed of progression and the behavior of this fire are “truly unprecedented”.

“The flames were up to 30 meters high,” David Lee, an evacuee, told the newspaper. Santa Cruz Sentinel. The 55-year-old was among the first people evacuated on Friday and believes his home was engulfed in the fire.

“He was heading straight for us. This fire is by far the fastest I have ever seen,” Lee added.

the Oak Fire was only contained up to 10% on Monday, after having destroyed a dozen buildings, but the emergency services fear that this toll will increase rapidly.

The fire threatens a few thousand homes in small rural towns in Mariposa County, in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada, where several thousand people remained under evacuation orders.

The fire, described as “mega fire” by Jon Heggie, is fueled in particular by dead trees and withered bushes in this region subject, like most of California, to chronic drought.

“It’s a direct result of climate change,” said the fire chief. “You can’t have ten years of drought in California and expect things not to change. »

Chronic drought and heat waves

Yosemite Park, one of the most famous in the world, suffered a fire in mid-July, the flames of which threatened its giant sequoias. These trees for some millennia have been generally preserved thanks in particular to controlled fires carried out for decades in these groves to reduce the fuel on the ground.

Declared on July 7, the fire in question was still not completely extinguished on Monday.

The American West has already experienced forest fires of exceptional magnitude and intensity in recent years, with a very marked lengthening of the fire season, a phenomenon that scientists attribute mainly to climate change.

L’Oak Fire is one of the most dramatic manifestations of the heat wave that hit the United States this weekend. Near the fire, temperatures are expected to reach 37°C on Monday, according to forecasts.

Similar or even higher temperatures were still expected in the central United States (Oklahoma, Kansas, Arkansas) and even the generally cool and very humid northwest coast of the country was not spared.

The meteorological services have issued a high heat alert in Seattle this week and records could be broken there on Tuesday. The city is so unaccustomed to heat that many homes lack air conditioning, a rarity in the United States.

The region had experienced a historic heat peak in June 2021, with temperatures reaching 47°C in places in the northwestern United States and neighboring Canada.

Authorities estimate that hundreds of people had died because of this unprecedented heat wave in the area.

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