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Back to Press Play with Madeleine Brand

Press Play with Madeleine Brand

With fires and record heat over Labor Day weekend, how should California address the new normal?

Cal Fire says in total, more than two dozen major wildfires are burning across the state as of this morning. That’s after a weekend of record-breaking heat statewide and especially in Southern California.

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By Madeleine Brand • Sep 8, 2020 • 14m Listen

The California National Guard rescued hundreds of people near the Sierra National Forest this weekend, as the Creek Fire burned more than 78,000 acres and devastated the town of Big Creek.

Meanwhile, near Yucaipa, more than 7,000 acres burned after a fire sparked from a pyrotechnic device at a gender reveal party.

In the Angeles National Forest, the Bobcat Fire threatens communities along the 210 freeway near the San Gabriel Mountains.

Cal Fire says in total, more than two dozen major wildfires are burning across the state as of this morning. That’s after a weekend of record-breaking heat statewide and especially in Southern California.

Woodland Hills actually hit 121 degrees on Sunday, the hottest temperature ever recorded in LA County. That same day, the county closed trails in the Santa Monica Mountains after a woman died while hiking on Saturday.

Heading into the weekend, widespread power outages were also a big concern, but fortunately the region seemed to be spared a worst-case scenario.

Governor Gavin Newsom has declared a statewide emergency because of the fires and extreme weather conditions. President Trump followed suit with a major disaster declaration.

Cal Fire says more California land has burned this year than ever before — 2.2 million acres. And it’s not even the high fire season of October or November.

“We’re living in a world altered by climate change. California’s had heat waves, it’s had droughts, wildfires for millennia. But we also know that global warming is increasing the odds of unprecedented extremes, including record-setting heat and extreme wildfire weather,” says Noah Diffenbaugh, professor of Earth Science Systems at Stanford.

He adds, “The good news is we’ve got a lot of systems that have been built around dealing with climate extremes. The bad news is they were designed and built for an old climate. We’re in a new climate, and that climate is going to continue to intensify.”

Mark Hertsgaard, environment correspondent for the Nation and Executive Director of Covering Climate Now, says California accounts for only 1% of global emissions. “The problem is not caused by Sacramento. The problem is caused in Washington, in Beijing, and other major capitals around the world where policy continues to subsidize fossil fuels, which is like throwing gasoline on these fires; policy continues to favor the carbon-intensive status quo of the economy we have today instead of moving toward the green economy of tomorrow.”

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    Madeleine Brand

    Host, 'Press Play'

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    Sarah Sweeney

    Vice President of Talk Programming, KCRW

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    Michell Eloy

    Line Editor, Press Play

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    Amy Ta

    Digital News & Culture Editor

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    Mark Hertsgaard

    Nation magazine

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    Noah Diffenbaugh

    professor of earth science systems at Stanford

    NewsEnvironmentCalifornia
Back to Press Play with Madeleine Brand