How California’s Fire Season Might Shape Up This Year

U.S.|How California’s Fire Season Might Shape Up This Year https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/03/us/california-fire-season.html You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load. California Today It’s been a rainy winter, but that won’t necessarily mean fewer wildfires. April 3, 2024, 9:00 a.m. ET […]

How California’s Fire Season Might Shape Up This Year

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U.S.|How California’s Fire Season Might Shape Up This Year

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/03/us/california-fire-season.html

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

California Today

It’s been a rainy winter, but that won’t necessarily mean fewer wildfires.

Soumya Karlamangla

Image Four firefighters wearing headlights in a wooded area at night. The ground among the trees is on fire.

Firefighters battling the Happy Camp Complex fire in August 2023.Credit…Max Whittaker for The New York Times

Luckily for us, the 2023 fire season in California was exceptionally mild.

Wildland fires burned roughly 325,000 acres and damaged 70 buildings across the state last year, making the fire season one of the least destructive in the past decade and a significant departure from some terrible recent fire years.

Nearly eight times as many acres — more than 2.5 million in all — burned in 2021, for example, as well as 3,500 structures. And the year before that was California’s worst on record, with 4.3 million acres burned.

So what kind of fire season are we in for this year?

Like 2023, this year has been a wet one. State officials announced on Tuesday that the depth of the snowpack in the Sierra Nevada stood at 110 percent of the average for this time of year, an encouraging sign that the state would have plenty of water in the months ahead.

After the wet winter, vegetation in the state isn’t as parched as it would be during a drought, so wildfire activity is likely to be pretty low in the spring and early summer, Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles, said in an online briefing this week.

But the year probably won’t stay as quiet as 2023 was. This year’s wet weather hasn’t been as extreme as last year’s — some inland cities, like Fresno and South Lake Tahoe, actually received less rain than usual this year — so plants and soil are more likely to dry out over the rest of this year than they were last year.

“I would be somewhat surprised if this year was not significantly more active,” Swain said.

Last summer was the coolest in California in more than a decade. Then the storm system that had been Hurricane Hilary dumped so much rain on Southern California in August — typically the peak of fire season — that it effectively ended the season there.


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