-
Iranians pay tribute to slain supreme leader weeks after killing
-
Russian police raid independent Novaya Gazeta media outlet
-
Barton Snow completes Cheltenham-Aintree double in Foxhunters Chase
-
IMF to cut global growth forecast due to Mideast war
-
Jihadists kill Nigerian troops including senior brigadier general
-
Local boy Aranburu sprints to Basque Country stage, Seixas extends lead
-
Russia brands Nobel Prize-winning rights group Memorial 'extremist'
-
England set for World Cup warm-up friendlies in Florida heat
-
Sabalenka pulls out of Stuttgart Open with injury
-
BTS kick off world tour with spectacular South Korea show
-
UK animal charity rescues over 250 dogs from single home
-
Barton Snow has a lot to crow about in Foxhunters Chase
-
Reigning champion Nick Rockett out of Grand National
-
'Free' McIlroy launches his Masters repeat bid
-
US envoy warns EU won't win AI race 'bringing others down'
-
Trump, Vance not 'meddling' in Hungary vote, says US envoy to EU
-
Jihadists kill 18 Nigerian troops including senior brigadier general
-
Mideast war threatens Africa's supply of humanitarian medicine
-
Seven World Cup winners start for England in Women's Six Nations opener
-
China FM vows deeper ties with North Korea on trip to Pyongyang
-
Sinner survives energy dip, end of streak to see off Machac
-
IMF expects to provide vulnerable economies hit by Iran war up to $50 bn
-
Oil prices jump back toward $100 on Mideast ceasefire doubts
-
Player tells Tiger to 'get a chauffeur'
-
Believers rejoice as Jerusalem's holy sites re-open
-
EU lawmakers want to tax Big Tech to fund budget
-
Croke Park boss eager to stage Fury-Joshua heavyweight clash in Dublin
-
Cannes Festival promises escapism in Hollywood-lite edition
-
Stabbed for saying no: Is online misogyny fueling violence in Brazil?
-
Russia's Nobel Prize-winning rights group Memorial branded 'extremist'
-
McIlroy ready for early start as 90th Masters begins
-
Fonseca eases into Monte Carlo last eight meeting with Zverev
-
Verstappen set for fresh F1 angst as engineer nears Red Bull exit - reports
-
Farhadi, Almodovar, Zvyagintsev to vie for top Cannes Festival prize
-
Ambitious Como's Champions League bid tested by Serie A leaders Inter
-
Emperor penguins listed as endangered species: IUCN
-
Six new caps for France for women's Six Nations opener
-
Calls for US-Iran truce to extend to Lebanon after Israeli strikes
-
Nepal ex-PM Oli gives defiant message after release from custody
-
Despite Middle East truce, airlines fear long-term disruptions
-
Memorial: Russia's Nobel Prize winning rights group facing 'extremism' ban
-
Artemis crew's families enthralled by messages from space
-
Champions Cup 'heartbreak' driving Toulouse revenge mission
-
Shallow Indonesian quake damages houses, injures residents
-
Nepal ex-PM Oli released from custody after 12 days: police
-
'Chills': Artemis astronauts say lunar flyby still washing over them
-
Ukraine lets firms deploy air defences against Russian attacks
-
Mountain-made: Balkan sheepdog eyes future beyond the hills
-
Escaped wolf forces school closure in South Korea
-
Three ways Orban gives himself an edge in Hungary's vote
Extreme weather, suburban sprawl fuel LA's wildfires
A prolonged dry spell combined with strong winds has created the "perfect conditions" for Los Angeles wildfires to rage out of control, even though experts say it's too soon to pinpoint exactly how much climate change contributed.
At the same time, perennial debates over suburban sprawl and forest management are intensifying, spurred by political mudslinging from incoming President Donald Trump and his close ally Elon Musk.
"We see these fires spread when it is hot and dry and windy, and right now all of those conditions are in place in southern California," Kristina Dahl, vice president for science at Climate Central, told AFP.
"The clearest climate signal for those three conditions is with the temperature," she added.
While it's not yet known what started the blazes, "human-caused climate change is intensifying the heat that drives wildfires, increasing temperatures in southern California up to two-degrees Celsius (3.6F) since 1895," Patrick Gonzalez, a climate change scientist at the University of California, Berkeley told AFP.
2024 is set to be named the hottest year on record for both the United States and the world, capping a decade of unprecedented heat.
- 'Widening' fire season -
Although wildfire activity can vary greatly from year to year, short-term extreme weather conditions helped create the "perfect conditions" for the rencent blazes, said wildfire scientist Maria Lucia Ferreira Barbosa of the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology.
Last year's El Nino weather system brought heavy rains that fueled excessive vegetation growth in the first half of 2024.
But the second half of the year was marked by drought across southern California, setting the stage for what scientists call "precipitation whiplash," another potential hallmark of climate change that turned the region into a tinderbox.
Low humidity -- combined with strong, dry Santa Ana winds blowing inland -- further parched the already desiccated shrublands.
Small embers can also be carried by the wind to ignite new areas, explained Rory Hadden, Professor of Fire Science at the University of Edinburgh.
This can quickly overwhelm firefighters "and can also make escape challenging as visibility is reduced," he added.
"The ongoing wildfires in California are unprecedented, in the sense that they are dramatic for this time of the year," said Apostolos Voulgarakis, an atmospheric scientist at Imperial College London, adding that research shows the state's fire season is "widening" as a consequence of climate change.
Attribution studies, which use statistical modeling to measure humanity's impact on climate, will be needed to determine the precise culpability of human-driven warming on the current fires.
However, scientists broadly agree that rising temperatures are making such fire-prone conditions more frequent.
A recent UN Environment Programme report found a potential global increase in extreme fires by up to 14 percent by 2030, 30 percent by 2050, and 50 percent by the end of the century.
- Prescribed burns and political feuds -
As more people move into wildfire-prone ecosystems -- partly driven by housing costs in safer coastal areas -- the danger to lives and property only grows.
Dahl noted that this dynamic is especially visible in places like Lake Tahoe, which has attracted newcomers, resulting in a marked growth in what is called the "wildland-urban interface."
Forest management is also under scrutiny.
The United States long practiced aggressive fire suppression before gradually embracing prescribed burns -- a tactic supported for centuries by Native American tribes.
California treats about 125,000 acres (50,000 hectares) of wildlands each year with controlled burns, but it isn't clear if that's sufficient, and the state's patchwork of regulations governing land under state, federal or private jurisdictions pose challenges to scaling it.
In the political arena, Musk took to X to slam "nonsense regulations" he believes hamper more active fire prevention, while Trump labeled Gavin Newsom "the incompetent governor," highlighting how the growing number of disasters is increasingly fueling ideological battles.
P.A.Mendoza--AT