Berliner Boersenzeitung - Western US heat wave to wane, but more fire danger ahead: forecast

EUR -
AED 4.160921
AFN 78.860625
ALL 98.354729
AMD 433.549279
ANG 2.027437
AOA 1038.822834
ARS 1294.806775
AUD 1.758018
AWG 2.041961
AZN 1.928581
BAM 1.961322
BBD 2.27676
BDT 137.226335
BGN 1.95544
BHD 0.427105
BIF 3355.257241
BMD 1.132849
BND 1.461777
BOB 7.791937
BRL 6.423482
BSD 1.12755
BTN 96.458948
BWP 15.217506
BYN 3.690107
BYR 22203.84675
BZD 2.265027
CAD 1.573658
CDF 3222.956016
CHF 0.934822
CLF 0.027835
CLP 1068.141218
CNY 8.179056
CNH 8.16261
COP 4728.173223
CRC 570.593807
CUC 1.132849
CUP 30.020507
CVE 110.579733
CZK 24.884173
DJF 200.790858
DKK 7.458397
DOP 66.385431
DZD 150.139932
EGP 56.472564
ERN 16.99274
ETB 153.040178
FJD 2.564202
FKP 0.847153
GBP 0.845072
GEL 3.104114
GGP 0.847153
GHS 13.756729
GIP 0.847153
GMD 82.153804
GNF 9767.325628
GTQ 8.656945
GYD 235.914172
HKD 8.873059
HNL 29.347976
HRK 7.540016
HTG 147.601636
HUF 402.546661
IDR 18522.086447
ILS 4.019232
IMP 0.847153
INR 97.048373
IQD 1477.139048
IRR 47707.11967
ISK 144.890174
JEP 0.847153
JMD 179.300831
JOD 0.803116
JPY 163.200569
KES 146.47499
KGS 99.06777
KHR 4513.587628
KMF 495.620557
KPW 1019.578439
KRW 1572.440423
KWD 0.347717
KYD 0.939633
KZT 577.297629
LAK 24386.11636
LBP 101424.393992
LKR 339.287713
LRD 225.539897
LSL 20.297195
LTL 3.34501
LVL 0.685249
LYD 6.181266
MAD 10.440192
MDL 19.619803
MGA 5089.215418
MKD 61.593411
MMK 2378.357794
MNT 4056.341871
MOP 9.090773
MRU 44.663757
MUR 51.476353
MVR 17.513981
MWK 1955.261521
MXN 21.856851
MYR 4.840097
MZN 72.386506
NAD 20.297375
NGN 1806.99684
NIO 41.495725
NOK 11.51581
NPR 154.321056
NZD 1.909939
OMR 0.436102
PAB 1.127574
PEN 4.161962
PGK 4.689119
PHP 63.034565
PKR 318.881614
PLN 4.241154
PYG 9006.156388
QAR 4.121877
RON 5.075846
RSD 117.356135
RUB 90.934228
RWF 1593.651457
SAR 4.249079
SBD 9.444715
SCR 16.371832
SDG 680.267259
SEK 10.845565
SGD 1.462486
SHP 0.890242
SLE 25.712767
SLL 23755.284141
SOS 644.399966
SRD 41.519052
STD 23447.693793
SVC 9.866647
SYP 14729.853487
SZL 20.290677
THB 37.122909
TJS 11.581372
TMT 3.970637
TND 3.384452
TOP 2.653248
TRY 44.001663
TTD 7.655383
TWD 34.169564
TZS 3055.859748
UAH 46.738853
UGX 4119.597952
USD 1.132849
UYU 47.246141
UZS 14498.626177
VES 107.26262
VND 29415.565546
VUV 137.41987
WST 3.138096
XAF 657.79438
XAG 0.034151
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.061582
XDR 0.818085
XOF 657.79438
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.296913
ZAR 20.294633
ZMK 10197.001036
ZMW 30.566379
ZWL 364.77702
  • RIO

    -0.1500

    62.24

    -0.24%

  • CMSC

    0.1000

    22.26

    +0.45%

  • SCS

    -0.1000

    10.25

    -0.98%

  • BTI

    0.8600

    44.44

    +1.94%

  • BCC

    -1.2700

    89.92

    -1.41%

  • RBGPF

    67.2000

    67.2

    +100%

  • CMSD

    0.0015

    22.17

    +0.01%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    11

    +0.73%

  • NGG

    0.9900

    73.42

    +1.35%

  • BCE

    0.0900

    21.66

    +0.42%

  • VOD

    0.7500

    10.39

    +7.22%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    12.82

    +0.23%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    54.99

    -0.07%

  • BP

    -0.2000

    29.2

    -0.68%

  • GSK

    0.4400

    38.4

    +1.15%

  • AZN

    0.2300

    69.92

    +0.33%

Western US heat wave to wane, but more fire danger ahead: forecast
Western US heat wave to wane, but more fire danger ahead: forecast / Photo: Frederic J. Brown - AFP

Western US heat wave to wane, but more fire danger ahead: forecast

A ferocious heat wave scorching the western United States could finally begin to wane in the coming days, forecasters said Wednesday, but they warned of dangerous fire conditions as howling winds sweep through the bone-dry region.

Text size:

California and neighboring states have endured a week of triple digit temperatures that have already brought deadly wildfires and the daily threat of power blackouts as the electricity grid struggles to cope with soaring demand.

But a predicted cooling as a cold front barrels in from Canada looks set to bring its own dangers, the National Weather Service said.

"This cold front will also aid in producing gusty winds throughout the northern Great Basin and northern High Plains today. Combined with low relative humidity, conditions are likely to support the potential for new wildfires to start and existing fires to spread uncontrollably," the NWS warned.

The Storm Prediction Center "has issued an Extremely Critical fire weather area over north-central Montana, where winds could gust up to 60 miles (95 kilometers) per hour."

A number of wildfires are already burning all over the western United States, including two deadly blazes that erupted over the long Labor Day weekend.

The Mill Fire in northern California killed two people, and destroyed over 100 buildings as it tore through 4,000 acres (1,600 hectares) of Siskiyou County.

To the southeast of Los Angeles, the Fairview Fire was continuing to grow, and remained out of control, fire officials said Wednesday.

Two people are known to have perished in the blaze, which exploded from a standing start during soaring temperatures on Monday, and has now consumed 5,000 acres.

More than 10,000 people have been told to evacuate, but the Riverside County Sheriff's Department said not everyone had heeded the warnings -- despite the deployment of dozens of deputies going door-to-door.

"You would think more people would take it seriously because it's so fast-moving, and that's why we try and do such a large evacuation area because the shift in winds, the weather is unpredictable, and fire moves fast," department spokeswoman Brandi Swan told the Los Angeles Times.

- Weather whiplash -

More than two decades of drought has left the US West tinder dry and vulnerable to fast-moving fires that burn hotter and are more destructive.

Scientists say human-caused global warming is interfering with the natural weather cycle, amping up the hots and making the storms wetter and more unpredictable.

The kind of weather whiplash climatologists say is becoming more frequent could be on display later in the week, with forecasters predicting the heat wave in the southwest could give way to torrential rain.

While Wednesday and Thursday were expected to continue to be very hot, with the mercury topping 110 Fahrenheit (43 Celsius) in several places, a hurricane looming off the Pacific coast of Mexico looked set to bring up to six inches (15 centimeters) of rain to some parts of Arizona and California.

"This amount of rainfall is likely to produce scattered instances of flash flooding, particularly near recent burn scars," the NWS said.

The soaring temperatures have put enormous pressure on California's creaking power grid, with record demand for electricity to cool homes.

Rolling blackouts were narrowly avoided on Tuesday after the California Independent System Operator, which runs the grid, issued an emergency call for households to turn up their air conditioner thermostats and switch off unnecessary lights.

"Consumer conservation played a big part in protecting electric grid reliability," the body tweeted. "Thank you, California!"

California has abundant solar installations, including on homes, which typically provide for around a third of the state's power requirements during daylight.

But when the sun goes down, that supply falls quickly, leaving traditional generation to plug the gap. The problem is particularly acute in the early evening when temperatures are still high, but solar starts dropping out of the power mix.

(G.Gruner--BBZ)