Fire Danger News and Info Tracker
Across the United States this week, fire danger has intensified as hot, dry, and windy conditions spread over multiple regions. CBS News reports that more than 15 million people in the central United States have been under fire weather alerts, with critical fire weather conditions stretching across parts of Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. Forecasters warn that strong winds, in some areas gusting above fifty miles per hour, combined with very low humidity, can turn any spark into a fast moving wildfire. Fox Weather notes that nearly fifty million people across close to twenty states recently experienced red flag warnings or related fire weather alerts as dry air pushed from the Plains into the Rockies and the Southeast. Central and southeastern Wyoming, as well as portions of Nebraska and Utah, have seen some of the most dangerous conditions, where grass and brush can ignite easily and spread quickly in winds of twenty to thirty miles per hour and humidity levels as low as fifteen percent. In the Southeast, including parts of South Carolina, southern Georgia, and north Florida, humidity has dropped near twenty percent, raising fire danger in areas not yet deep into their typical summer fire season. According to the National Interagency Fire Center, as of the latest weekly update there are more than a dozen uncontained large fires burning nationwide and over two thousand eight hundred personnel committed to incidents from Florida to Idaho. So far this year, more than thirty thousand fires have burned over two point four million acres across the country, a figure that reflects both early season activity in the South and emerging activity in the interior West. National Weather Service fire weather outlooks, together with U S Geological Survey fire danger forecasts, indicate that elevated to critical fire danger will continue where dry fuels overlap with strong winds and above normal temperatures, especially in the central and southern Plains and interior West over the next several days. Globally, the European Union’s Global Wildfire Information System and analyses by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration highlight a broader pattern. Fire seasons are lengthening, fire weather is becoming more frequent, and extreme wildfire activity has more than doubled worldwide in recent decades. This week, satellite based fire monitoring shows active fires not only in North America but also in parts of South America, Africa, and Southeast Asia, underscoring that rising fire danger is a growing, worldwide concern driven by hotter, drier conditions and accumulated fuels. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
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