How it came to be? US destructive wildfire season explained

Nine of the 10 most destructive fires in California have happened in the last decade, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. PHOTO: REUTERS

TALENT, OREGON (REUTERS) - Dozens of conflagrations have raged across more than 1.6 million hectares in Oregon, California and Washington state since August, laying waste to several small towns, destroying thousands of homes and killing at least 35 people.

The region's increasingly dry and overgrown forests have become large-scale tinderboxes over decades while wildfires have become more frequent, more intense and more deadly. Here's why.

IS THE PROBLEM POOR FOREST MANAGEMENT OR CLIMATE CHANGE?

US President Donald Trump blames poor forest management - mainly a failure to cull overgrown forests - for the increasing number and intensity of fires. The governors of California and Oregon - the states worst hit this season - say climate change is largely responsible.

Scientists say both factors are at work.

Starting in the early 1900s, wildfires were fought aggressively and suppressed, which led to a build-up of dead trees and brush in forested areas. That means more fuel for bigger, more intense and damaging wildfires.

But changes in climate and weather patterns - warming temperatures, periods of drought and erratic rains - also are causes.

"We don't want to minimise the impact of climate because it's significant already and because it's growing in the future," said Dan Cayan, a climate researcher at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego.

WHAT WEATHER CONDITIONS LED TO THIS YEAR'S FIRES?

The region generally experienced a relatively dry winter, leaving forests particularly dessicated and vulnerable to extreme heat that materialised in August. Dry, gusty winds, known as Santa Ana in Southern California and Diablo in Northern California, contributed to the fires' rapid spread.

A drought-induced infestation of bark beetles killed 150 million trees alone in California, creating huge swaths of easily flammable material.

"All that makes for pretty explosive conditions if an ignition takes place," Cayan said.

California also experienced thunderstorms with very little rain that contributed to a surge in dry lightning strikes - the most widespread burst of such storms in California since 2008.

In mid-August, nearly 6,000 lightning strikes were recorded during a single 24-hour stretch.

Nine of the 10 most destructive fires in California have happened in the last decade, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CalFire) despite modern forest management techniques aimed at mitigating fire risk.

WHAT IS BEING DONE TO MAKE FORESTS LESS PRONE TO LARGE FIRES?

California has said that about 15 million acres of forest are in need of thinning and brush-clearing. In a step towards meeting that goal, the state signed an agreement last month with the US Forest Service to work on 404,685 million hectares of forestland yearly.

California also said this year that it completed 35 emergency fuel break projects, which create gaps in vegetation that form natural barriers to fire spread and protect residents in areas of high fire risk.

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