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By the numbers: California鈥檚 mild 2022 wildfire season

Firefighters battle the Mosquito Fire near Foresthill, Calif. Wednesday, Sept. 7, 2022.
Andrew Nixon
/
CapRadio
Firefighters battle the Mosquito Fire near Foresthill, Calif. Wednesday, Sept. 7, 2022.

Moderate weather and well-timed rainstorms in much of California combined to curb the acreage and structures burned.

As California emerges from its 鈥減eak鈥 wildfire season, the state has managed to avoid its recent . So far in 2022, the fewest acres have burned since 2019.

State Emergency Services Director Mark Ghilarducci said California had 鈥渁 bit of luck鈥 with weather this summer. Although enduring yet another drought year, much of the state was spared the worst of the heat and dryness that can spark fires. And in some instances, well-timed rain came to the rescue.

Cal Fire officials also attribute some of the mild wildfire season to their emphasis on clearing away vegetation that fuels fires. Cal Fire Chief Joe Tyler said the $2.8 billion spent in the last two years on forest management made a difference, with the work 鈥渕oderat(ing) fires approaching communities.鈥

Mindful that wildfires can spark at any time in an environment driven by climate change, California officials have their fingers crossed after Gov. Gavin Newsom pronounced 鈥渢he end of peak fire season鈥 in mid-November. While California has entered an age of year-round fire seasons, the bulk of its fires occur from April through October.

Still, Newsom knows better than to tempt fate. So while reporting that the state had a relatively moderate fire season and praising fire managers and crews, he quickly added that anything can still happen.

鈥淲e are not here with a sign, 鈥楳ission Accomplished,鈥 in any way shape or form,鈥 Newsom said. 鈥淲e will continue to maintain our vigilance.鈥

Here鈥檚 a look at some of the stories behind the numbers.

362,455

That鈥檚 how many so far this year. Almost a quarter of those tore through remote El Dorado and Placer counties during the in September and October.

For perspective, last year鈥檚 acreage was about seven times larger 鈥 2.5 million. And those years paled in comparison to record-breaking 2020, when more than 4.3 million acres were ablaze in California.

The state still threw everything at the wildfires it faced this year, hiring 1,350 additional personnel, deploying a new fleet of bespoke firefighting helicopters, and putting satellites, drones and artificial intelligence to work to attack each blaze.

772

Statistics about dramatically fewer structures destroyed by wildfires offer cold comfort when it鈥檚 your home that burned down. Still, there was much less damage done compared to recent years: 772 California structures were destroyed by fire this year, while 104 were damaged.

The McKinney Fire in July leveled 185 structures and the Oak Fire in Mariposa County destroyed 182, also in July.

Last year, , was much worse: 3,560 buildings were destroyed 鈥 almost five times more than this year鈥 and 286 were damaged. And during the 2020 season, the benchmark worst in nearly every statistical category, 11,116 buildings were lost.

The 2018 Camp Fire in the Butte County town of Paradise remains the most destructive fire in California history, wiping out nearly 19,000 structures鈥攁n entire community.

9

The ultimate cost was great, even in a quiet fire year. 2022 fires claimed the lives of nine Californians.

Four people died in August in the McKinney Fire in rural Siskiyou County, a sprawling blaze that also injured 12 firefighters. Two people were found dead in a car in their driveway. Another victim was a woman in her 70s who worked as a fire lookout for nearly five decades. She was killed in her home.

For comparison, three people died during the 2021 fire season, 33 in 2020 and three in 2019. The Camp Fire, which killed 85 people, retains the awful distinction as the state鈥檚 deadliest fire.

256

It鈥檚 a small victory, but fire officials will take it. Some in 2022, which is 256 fewer than the five-year average of 7,746. In the fire world, even modest gains (about 3% below average) are welcome.

Tree removal projects 鈥 and burn scars from previous wildfires 鈥 can often slow or stop the spread of new fires. That simple calculus of creating a less-combustible landscape should equate to fewer and smaller fires, even with the dozens of variables that go into sparking wildfires.

California has a goal, in conjunction with the federal government 鈥 which owns the majority of the state鈥檚 forested land 鈥 to 鈥溾 a million acres annually by 2025. That entails setting and monitoring low-intensity small fires, building and extending fuel breaks and clearing rights-of-way.

But it鈥檚 painstaking and slow: In the 2021-22 fiscal year, the state conducted nearly 600 across 101,000 acres. An additional 21,000 acres have been cleared since July.

76,788

The state鈥檚 largest wildfire of the year, the Mosquito Fire, which burned 76,788 acres in national forests, turned out to be puny by recent standards, especially when compared to 2020鈥檚 million-acre giga fires and last year鈥檚 .

Size isn鈥檛 everything. Although not huge, the Mosquito Fire, which ignited in early September, was stubborn in the extreme, abetted by its location in steep canyons where fighting the flames was difficult. The fire quadrupled in size in one day. It took almost three months for firefighters to control it.

The scenario of that fire burning in a dense and dry landscape was sobering enough to prompt evacuations and weeks of defensive actions including closing parts of Tahoe and El Dorado national forests at peak camping season.

A sustained deluge of rain in October was credited with finally helping to suppress the blaze.

3

Along with the Mosquito Fire, two other wildfires were also, in part, extinguished by an increasing rarity in California: Rain.

Firefighters in the Rockies have an axiom: Snow puts out fires. California鈥檚 analogue occurred this summer when unexpected rainstorms doused two particularly nasty fires: the in Riverside County and the deadly in Siskiyou County.

Moisture from Tropical Storm Kay bailed out the Fairview Fire in September, and thunderstorms dumped three inches of rain on the McKinney Fire in August to douse some flames. But the storm also sparked lightning, which set off mud and debris flows.

It鈥檚 not just precipitation that influences the severity of the fire season. It鈥檚 also wind.

As wildfires in the northern part of the state were tamped down at the end of summer, attention turned to the south, where fires often are triggered by dry Santa Ana winds. Perhaps to remind everyone who鈥檚 in charge, winds gusted through Southern California over the Thanksgiving weekend, setting off red flag alerts for brush fires. But no large fires erupted.

12th

If history is any guide, the 12th month of the year can鈥檛 be counted on to be quiet.

In 2017 Southern California exploded under strong Santa Ana conditions, sparking 29 wildfires, including the , which burned 281,893 acres in Santa Barbara and Ventura Counties, making it at the time the largest fire in California history.

The month-long barrage started in December, ran across 440 square miles and destroyed more than 1,000 structures. It burned into January.

In 2020 more than a half-dozen wildfires started in December, a month that is reliably cool and moist 鈥 or sometimes hot and dry.

In other words, to quote the governor, 鈥淲e are not out of the woods yet.鈥

 is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.