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Brown points to climate change for early fire season


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By Anthony York, Los Angeles Times

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Jerry Brown put the state’s early wildfire season in global terms Monday, saying the state would have to grow accustomed to more forest fires as a consequence of climate change.

Brown’s remarks at the CalFire aviation management unit in Sacramento came as firefighters in Ventura County said they expected to have the 28,000-acre Springs fire fully contained today. State firefighters have responded to about twice the average number of wildfires so far this year – more than 1,100 in all.

“Our climate is changing, the weather is becoming more intense,” Brown said in an airplane hangar filled with trucks, airplanes and helicopters used by the state to fight fires. “It’s going to cost a lot of money and a lot of lives.

“The big issue (is) how do we adapt,” Brown said, “because it doesn’t look like the people who are in charge are going to do what it takes to really slow down this climate change, so we are going to have to adapt. And adapting is going to be very, very expensive.”

With the snowpack in the Sierra mountains at just 17 percent of normal, state officials are bracing for a long, destructive fire season. State Natural Resources Secretary John Laird, who joined Brown at Monday’s press conference, said he was preparing for “a deadly year.”

CalFire Director Ken Pimlott said more than 40,000 acres have burned in California this month alone. While the early fire season has become more common in Southern California, state officials officially opened the fire season in Northern California six weeks earlier than normal – just the fourth time in state history that has happened, he said.

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Comments (3)
  1. DAVID DEWITT says - Posted: May 8, 2013

    Dont you know climate change is responsible for all our problems from hang nails to every other thing that the government can not explain.

  2. West Shore Gal says - Posted: May 8, 2013

    Hmmmm…maybe this is why healthy forest/defensible space projects should of started 20 years ago with the rate and attention that land managers and agencies are giving them today. We didn’t need the excuse of climate change (which in my opinion is factual)to change the way we manage our forests and wildlands back then, we already knew that decades of fire suppression coupled with the ever increasing accumulation of hazardous forest fuels was going to spell trouble later on.

    Treating the problem before it happens is the strategy that needs to be streamlined and implemented on a wide-scale. It has to be far more costly trying to fight a catastrophic wildfire then trying to prevent or reduce the intensity of a wildfire with proper forest treatments.

  3. Lisa says - Posted: May 8, 2013

    No David it isn’t the cause of hangnails… but it is the cause of the unpredictible weather we are seeing worldwide. Science has explained it, just some people think they can “believe” it away.