California WildfiresVast majority of rural land in ‘high’ or ‘very high’ risk status
The climate crisis is among the key factors in a new assessment that shows more than 85% of California’s rural and unincorporated land is now in “high” or “very high” severity zones for wildfire danger, the state’s
California’s new proposed
The amount of land in “very high” severity zones saw a significant jump, increasing by 14.6% in the fresh analysis. If the proposed map is approved, nearly 17 million acres — an area larger than the state of
“A lot has happened since 2007,”
Around 98% of
As recently as 2018,
The proposed map includes only rural and unincorporated areas — cities and large urban areas are excluded, but are expected to be added in an updated version next year.
Dozens of meetings to discuss the findings are scheduled over the next several weeks to allow for public comment before the map is officially adopted.
“CAL FIRE’s fire scientists and wildfire mitigation experts developed the map using a science-based and field-tested model that assigns a hazard score based on the factors that influence fire likelihood and fire behavior. Many factors are considered, such as fire history, existing and potential fuel (natural vegetation), predicted flame length, blowing embers, terrain, and typical fire weather for an area. These zones fall into the following classifications — moderate, high, and very high,” the agency explained.
2022 brought Oregon less wildfire, more drought and major clean energy investments
85% of rural CA land now in ‘very high’ risk for wildfires
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