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Gallery|Climate

Photos: Fire crews battle massive blazes across US West

States across western US struggle to contain dozens of wildfires that experts say are worsening due to climate change.

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USA-WILDFIRES/CALIFORNIA
Firefighters work as the Mosquito Fire burns in Foresthill, California, September 13, 2022 [Fred Greaves/Reuters]
By News Agencies
Published On 14 Sep 202214 Sep 2022

Dozens of active fires in California, Idaho, Oregon, Washington and other states in the western United States have ravaged more than 3,100 sq km (1,200sq miles), highlighting the devastating effects of a two-decade-plus drought that has left the region parched.

Dense smoke blanketed towns in southwestern Oregon, including the popular outdoor tourism gateway of Bend, as the Cedar Creek Fire continued to grow this week.

The blaze had consumed 155,297 acres (62,846 hectares) as of Tuesday afternoon, according to the Oregon State Fire Marshal, but was only 15 percent contained. Evacuations were ordered for a few Oregon counties, although some orders were eased amid cooler weather and gentler winds.

INTERACTIVE_OREGON_FIRES_SEP15
(Al Jazeera)

The inferno – which began back in early August – has turned skies an eerie orange, as more than 1,200 firefighters and other personnel converged on the steep mountainous terrain, much of it in US national forest land and hard to reach.

Scientists have said the long-term drought seen in the country’s western region has been worsened by climate change. Much of the countryside is parched, creating conditions for hot, fast and destructive wildfires.

In California, the Mosquito Fire burning 177km (110 miles) northeast of San Francisco erupted on Tuesday afternoon just hours after officials had reported making “great strides” in the battle.

More than 11,000 people have been evacuated and nearly 6,000 structures are threatened – an increase in both figures as the blaze raged on Tuesday near Foresthill and Todd Valley after a spot fire jumped the Middle Fork of the American River, officials said.

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Cal Fire Public Information Officer Tyree Zander told Sacramento TV station KXTV that crews in the air and on the ground are in an intense battle to control the flames. He explained that ground crews doing back burns, trying to set fires to burn dry brush off the mountainsides, so that when the actual wildfire gets there, there will be nothing left for it to burn.

USA-WILDFIRES/CALIFORNIA
A firefighter throws torch light as the Mosquito Fire burns in Foresthill, California, September 13, 2022 [Fred Greaves/Reuters]
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US-WEATHER-CLIMATE-FIRE
Water tender crews monitor a backfire during the Mosquito Fire in Foresthill, an unincorporated area of Placer County, California [Josh Edelson/AFP]
US-WEATHER-CLIMATE-FIRE
Cal Fire Placer Crew firefighter Ace Nieves, second from right, along with others, monitors a backfire during the Mosquito Fire [Josh Edelson/AFP]
Western Wildfires
Flames consume an outbuilding as the Mosquito Fire burns in California [Noah Berger/AP Photo]
Western Wildfires
Firefighter Christian Mendoza manages a backfire, flames lit by firefighters to burn off vegetation, while battling the Mosquito Fire in Placer County [Noah Berger/AP Photo]
USA-WILDFIRES/CALIFORNIA
Smoke rises as the Mosquito Fire burns in Foresthill, California, September 13, 2022 [Fred Greaves/Reuters]
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USA NORTHERN CALIFORNIA MOSQUITO FIRE
Burned out trees and brush at Tahoe National Forest after the Mosquito Fire passed through the Placer County community of Foresthill, California [John G Mabanglo/EPA]
US-WEATHER-CLIMATE-FIRE
Hotshot firefighters work to contain the Cedar Creek Fire just east of Oakridge, Oregon, September 12, 2022 [Dan Morrison/AFP]
Pacific Northwest Wildfires Power
Firefighters use aircraft to battle a wildfire south of Salem, Oregon, on September 9, 2022 [Andrew Selsky/AP Photo]
US-WEATHER-CLIMATE-FIRE
The Cedar Creek Fire in western Oregon, September 13, 2022 [Oregon State Fire Marshal/Handout via AFP]

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