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California battles its biggest wildfire of the year

Author
AFP,
Publish Date
Fri, 4 Jul 2025, 4:40pm
There are fears of a difficult summer ahead for California after the traumatic wildfires that killed 30 people in January. A pedestrian records the Palisade fire in Los Angeles on January 7. Photo / Philip Cheung, the New York Times
There are fears of a difficult summer ahead for California after the traumatic wildfires that killed 30 people in January. A pedestrian records the Palisade fire in Los Angeles on January 7. Photo / Philip Cheung, the New York Times

California battles its biggest wildfire of the year

Author
AFP,
Publish Date
Fri, 4 Jul 2025, 4:40pm

More than 300 firefighters are battling a massive blaze in California, a state which is dreading summer wildfires.

The “Madre Fire” broke out yesterday in San Luis Obispo, a rural county in the heart of the US state.

Around 200 people were ordered to evacuate, with dozens of buildings threatened by the flames.

It is the largest blaze so far this year in California, which was scarred by wildfires that destroyed swathes of Los Angeles in January.

The fire has spread quickly: in 24 hours, it has ravaged more than 21,000ha, according to the state’s fire service Cal Fire.

Images from the state warning system showed thick columns of black smoke overhanging mountains in the hilly, remote region.

“The state will always show up to protect all communities - no matter where a fire begins,” California Governor Gavin Newsom said on X, announcing the deployment of reinforcements.

The “Madre Fire” comes at the heel of several other blazes, raising fears of a difficult summer ahead for the state already traumatised by the wildfires that killed 30 people at the start of the year.

It was an unusually dry winter and spring in southern California, and vegetation is already parched, noted UCLA extreme climate events specialist Daniel Swain in a blog post.

“Given the expectation of even more intense and widespread heat later this summer, that extra month or two of vegetation drying will heavily factor into burning conditions later this season,” Swain said.

It is the first summer season since United States President Donald Trump ordered budget and personnel cuts at the Forest Service, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) and Fema, the federal agency which co-ordinates disaster response.

Yesterday, Newsom accused Trump of not funding enough wildfire prevention projects.

“We need an equivalent commitment of resources — not rhetoric,” Newsom said at a press conference, noting that “57% of the land in this state is under the jurisdiction of the federal government”.

-Agence France-Presse

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