Thousands Evacuate as Wildfires Ravage Utah and Northern California

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U.S.|Thousands Evacuate as Wildfires Ravage Utah and Northern California

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/15/us/utah-california-wildfire-evacuations.html

Firefighters battled the Dixie Fire in California and a new fire in Parleys Canyon in Utah as searing temperatures continued to bake the western United States.

The Parleys Fire started east of Salt Lake City on Saturday when a car sent sparks flying after its catalytic converter malfunctioned, the authorities said.
Credit...Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune, via Associated Press

Aug. 15, 2021, 3:19 p.m. ET

Intense wildfires continued to burn across parts of the western United States on Sunday, prompting thousands of evacuations in Utah and Northern California as the fires collectively engulfed more than a half-million acres of land.

The Dixie Fire in California had spread to more than 550,000 acres across four counties in the northern part of the state and was 31 percent contained as of Sunday morning, according to Cal Fire.

In eastern Utah, the fast-moving Parleys Canyon Fire, which ignited on Saturday afternoon, quickly forced the evacuation of at least 6,000 homes, according to the authorities. Gov. Spencer Cox of Utah warned that Sunday would be “another difficult fire day,” as the blaze had charred at least 1,500 acres east of Salt Lake City and was 0 percent contained.

Mr. Cox said that some of Utah’s firefighters were returning from wildfire duty in other states to fight the blaze in Parleys Canyon.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency said on Sunday that it had agreed to a request from officials in Utah to help cover the cost of fighting the fire. The American Red Cross of Utah said that 25 people had stayed in a shelter that the organization had set up at a high school in Park City on Saturday night.

State fire authorities said the fire started when a car sent sparks flying along a highway after its catalytic converter, a device that controls exhaust emissions, malfunctioned.

The Utah Department of Public Safety said in a statement on Saturday that the authorities had discovered two fires burning a mile apart along a highway in Parleys Canyon, and that the blaze quickly spread up a nearby mountain.

The fire continued on an eastward path and was moving “at a rapid pace,” the department said.

The sheriff of Summit County, which includes Parleys Canyon, said on Twitter on Saturday night that some residents had refused to evacuate, and that their decision was putting firefighters and other emergency workers in danger.

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Credit...Noah Berger/Associated Press

Saturday was a dry, sweltering day in parts of Utah. In Salt Lake City, the temperature peaked at 100 degrees and the humidity dropped as low as 13 percent, according to the National Weather Service.

Some much-needed help may be on the way later this week for the firefighters battling the state’s three wildfires, of which Parleys Canyon is the largest. There was a possibility of rain and thunderstorms across much of the state between Tuesday and Thursday, according to the National Weather Service in Salt Lake City.

In Northern California, the Dixie Fire had destroyed 1,120 structures as of Sunday and threatened another 14,838 buildings, the authorities said. Three firefighters sustained unspecified injuries, according to Cal Fire, which said the cause of the fire was still under investigation.

The blaze is the largest on record in the United States and the largest single-origin wildfire in California history. Last year, lightning strikes ignited multiple wildfires in three national forests in California in what became known as the August Complex, burning more than a million acres.

For more than a month, firefighters have been struggling to quell the flames of the Dixie Fire, which earlier this month destroyed the Gold Rush town of Greenville, Calif., where before-and-after satellite photos showed the devastation.

Thunderstorms were in the forecast on Sunday for the area where the Dixie Fire was burning, a development that emergency responders said could hamper firefighting efforts if there are lightning strikes. A drought in the region, where temperatures could reach 100 degrees with less than 18 percent humidity, left the area particularly vulnerable to wildfires, the authorities said.

Although wildfires occur throughout the West every year, scientists see the influence of climate change in the extreme heat waves that have contributed to the intensity of fires this summer. Prolonged periods of abnormally high temperatures are a signal of a shifting climate, they say.

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