California wildfires rage, forcing evacuations. How warm winds stoke risks.

January 8, 2025

California wildfires rage. How warm winds stoke risks. – CSMonitor.com

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Mario Anzuoni/Reuters

Firefighters work to extinguish flames as the Eaton Fire, one of four blazes spreading in Southern California, burns in Pasadena, California, Jan. 7, 2025.

The Los Angeles region is experiencing severe wind and fire danger this week, with gusts sweeping through a highly populated area that is exceptionally dry for this time of year.  

On Tuesday, a wildfire gained rapid ground in the hilly Pacific Palisades neighborhood, home to many celebrities, and remained zero percent contained as of Wednesday morning. About 30,000 residents were under evacuation orders, and some fled their cars because of traffic backups. More than 200,000 people were without power in Los Angeles County by Tuesday evening, according to local officials.

Portions of the Pacific Coast Highway and Interstate 10 were closed to all but locals to help with evacuation. The wind event is expected to last several days, and occasional gusts were forecast at up to 100 mph. It could be the strongest Santa Ana windstorm in more than a decade across Los Angeles and Ventura counties, according to the National Weather Service.

Residents of Southern California are familiar with these gusty Santa Ana winds that can tear through the region in cooler months. Dry and warm, they originate inland and push with ferocity over mountains and through narrow canyons to the coast, stoking sparks – from downed power lines, for instance – into a rapidly moving fire. But this week’s weather event is particularly dangerous because it comes at a time of a dry start to what is typically the rainy season here.

“This is one of the most powerful wind events of the season. Although it is occurring in the heart of what is normally our wet season, we have had no significant precipitation to shut off its ability to spread wildfire quickly,” said Alex Hall, director of the Center for Climate Science at the University of California Los Angeles, in a statement.

Daniel Cole/Reuters

A police officer knocks on a door to alert people following an evacuation order, as a wildfire burns in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of west Los Angeles, in Santa Monica, Jan. 7, 2025.

Why are these winds particularly dangerous?

This is not like what might be considered a more typical Santa Ana event where it’s windy in the mountains and fairly calm in the highly populated valley areas, said UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain in a webinar with reporters on Monday. “It will be quite a widespread event” covering a large swath of Southern California and going for several days, he said. Very strong upper-level winds are aligning with surface winds to produce what he called an “atmospheric blow-dryer.”

At the same time, Dr. Swain warned of “mountain waves.” When wind hits mountains – and Los Angeles sits at the foot of the Santa Monica and San Gabriel Mountains – it gets pushed up in a wave. That wind can bounce around up above when the atmosphere is more stable, or, in this case, it can be forced down the other side, sweeping along foothills and into populated valleys and producing windstorms that accelerate conflagrations. This phenomenon fueled the Lahaina Fire in Hawaii in 2023 and the Marshall Fire in Colorado in 2021, he said.

What happened to California’s wet season?

The rainy season can run from October to April. It’s alive and well in Northern California, which has already seen heavy rain and snow. But the southern part of the state has seen nary a drop, and in many parts of the Southland it’s the driest start to the season on record, according to Dr. Swain. This makes for bone-dry conditions. Statistically, February is the wettest month in the Golden State, but that’s still a long way off, and there is no rain in the immediate forecast for Southern California.

Ringo Chiu/Reuters

A fire engine operates as the Palisades Fire, one of several blazes spreading across Southern California, burns during a windstorm on the west side of Los Angeles, Jan. 7, 2025.

Does climate change play a role in this event?

Not as it relates to the Santa Ana winds, say climate scientists. Interestingly, climate change could potentially cause fewer and less severe Santa Anas, says Paul Ullrich, a professor of regional and climate modeling at the University of California Davis. “Santa Ana wind events are one of the few phenomenon where we actually expect them to weaken,” he says.

Where climate change does play a role is in “weather whiplash” – when weather shifts from one extreme to another. The past two California winters were unusually wet, including severe flooding. That fed an explosion of vegetation growth. Last summer, though, saw record heat in California, followed by the nonstart of the rainy season in the south. Hence, this week’s tinderbox.

“One of the biggest consequences of climate change is increases in variability – that’s a fancy way of saying that extreme conditions tend to become more common, and kind of average conditions become less common,” says Professor Ullrich.

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