Wildfires Surge Across US: 22,000+ Fires Burn Record Acres as Spring Fire Season Intensifies
In the United States, fire danger remains elevated as spring advances, with the National Interagency Fire Center reporting 109 new fires yesterday alone, including six new large fires and 25 uncontained large ones nationwide. Nearly 1,900 personnel are deployed across active incidents, and year-to-date figures show 22,658 fires burning 1,815,628 acres, surpassing the 10-year average for acres burned by this point. The Southern Area leads in activity, where wind-driven growth in Georgia and Florida threatens structures.
More than 100 wildfires rage in Florida and Georgia, destroying homes and forcing hundreds of evacuations. In Georgia, record-breaking blazes, now in their second week, draw reinforcements from across the country, according to CBS News reports. In Bradley County, Georgia, over 50 homes lie in ruins, with more than 1,000 still threatened by extreme drought and strong winds that propel bright orange flames skyward. Northern Florida fires disrupted Amtrak rail service, stranding hundreds of passengers earlier this week, though conditions there have eased slightly.
Nationwide, over 15 million people in the central United States face fire weather alerts through Friday, driven by heat, dry air, and gusts up to 50 or 60 miles per hour, as detailed by the National Weather Service and CBS News. Critical risks affect 3.8 million in parts of Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas on Thursday, with elevated dangers spanning broader areas including Arizona, South Dakota, and Wyoming. Red flag warnings signal extreme fire behavior potential, where low single-digit humidity, temperatures 15 to 25 degrees above average, and dry fuels enable rapid, uncontrollable spread.
The Rocky Mountain Area sees new large fires fueled by dry conditions and gusty winds. Southern Colorado anticipates more red flag warnings through Thursday, heightening risks of fast-moving wildfires. These events coincide with record U.S. drought levels, signaling an intensifying wildfire season. Fire danger ratings classify many zones as very high or extreme, where fires ignite easily, spread rapidly, and demand exhaustive suppression efforts, with no outdoor burning advised.
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