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Los Angeles Faces Another Day of Extreme Fire Risk as Winds Rise

By and | January 14, 2025

Hot, dry winds are pummeling Los Angeles and surrounding areas of Southern California, raising wildfire risks through at least Wednesday as the region reels from blazes that have killed at least 24 people and burned neighborhoods to the ground.

Tropical-storm-strength winds were raking the mountains around L.A. on Tuesday, with gusts reaching 60 miles per hour. About 2 million people face extreme fire conditions across a swath of land that includes Oxnard, Thousand Oaks and Simi Valley, according to the U.S. Storm Prediction Center. Red-flag fire warnings extend south to San Diego.

Related: LA Wildfires Losses Could Top $30 Billion for Å˽ðÁ«´«Ã½Ó³»­ Industry

The winds are poised to ease through the second half of the week, giving firefighters a better chance to corral the blazes. Humidity will also rise through the weekend, although there isn’t any rain in the forecast, said Marc Chenard, a senior branch forecaster at the U.S. Weather Prediction Center. The moisture in the air can help slow the drying of plants, potentially preventing them from turning into fuel for more fires.

Wind “conditions should improve some by Thursday,” Chenard said. “It is a gradual trend down.”

Through late Monday, the Palisades Fire had scorched 23,713 acres and was 14% contained, while the Eaton Fire had consumed 14,117 acres and was 33% contained, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. A new blaze called the Auto Fire broke out near Oxnard late Monday, but officials said crews have managed to keep it from spreading.

Firefighters from the California Conservation Corps work to contain the Eaton Fire in Altadena, California, on Jan. 13.

The Eaton and Palisades fires are expected to rank among the costliest in modern U.S. history. Wells Fargo & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. estimate insured losses could reach as much as $30 billion, considerably higher than a $20 billion forecast last week from JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Governor Gavin Newsom proposed an additional $2.5 billion of state spending on emergency response efforts and recovery, which would need approval from the Democratic-led state legislature. His office said $1 billion in funding would be reimbursed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

At a White House briefing on Monday, President Joe Biden said Congress would need to provide tens of billions of dollars to help the rebuilding process. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has issued an executive order that aims to expedite recovery by “clearing away red tape and bureaucracy.”

Related: Edison Utility Sued Over Role of Equipment in Los Angeles Fire

Officials are continuing to hunt for the causes of the fires. Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna said investigators are looking at whether power lines owned by Edison International’s Southern California Edison utility sparked the Eaton Fire, although they are also examining other potential causes.

The utility has already been accused in a lawsuit of starting the blaze. But Chief Executive Officer Pedro Pizarro said on Bloomberg Television on Monday that the company’s internal data showed no problems on its power lines in the area at the time the fire erupted.

“We have not seen any of the signatures that we typically see when a line causes a fire,” he said on The Close.

The entrance to a home destroyed by the Palisades wildfire in Malibu, California, on Jan. 13. Photographer: Brandon Bell/Getty Images

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, meanwhile, has been hit with a lawsuit faulting the utility for not supplying enough water to fight the Palisades Fire. The complaint appeared late Monday on the Los Angeles Superior Court’s website, but hasn’t yet been fully processed by the court.

While conditions will gradually improve through the weekend, meteorologists are watching forecast models that suggest another round of dry, dangerous winds may arrive next week.

Top photo: A plane drops fire retardant during the Eaton Fire near Altadena, California, on Monday, Jan. 13, 2025. Southern California faces another round of dangerous fire weather set to begin Monday night, even as crews struggle to contain wind-driven blazes that have paralyzed Los Angeles for nearly a week and killed at least 24 people.

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