With oppressively hot, dry weather looming over much of the Western US and Canada, the enormous Bootleg Fire in Oregon grew again and authorities ordered new evacuations.
Bootleg, the largest of 80 major fires now active in the US, spread overnight from 274,000 acres to 290,000 acres – three times the size of the metropolis of Detroit, officials said.
On Sunday some 2,000 people have had to evacuate, with more following.
Satellite imagery from the National Weather Service (NWS) showed a huge plume of smoke soaring from Bootleg, in southern Oregon, to the Canadian border, hundreds of miles to the northeast.
However, with firefighters making progress on Bootleg’s western flank, overall containment of the blaze more than tripled, to 22%.
Heavy winds and widespread lightning storms remained a serious threat.
Firefighters blamed lightning strikes for a fast-growing blaze in California’s Lake Tahoe tourist area.
The so-called Tamarack Fire, fanned by fierce winds, has grown explosively to more than 20,000 acres, with zero containment so far.
The small nearby community of Markleeville, on the Nevada border, has been evacuated.
In California, the Dixie fire, the state’s largest, continues burning toward the northeast in a remote area that is difficult to reach, officials said.
That wildfire – which has burned over 23sq miles (59.5sq km) and is 15% contained – has prompted an evacuation order for Plumas County.
“The weather is really against us,” said John Flannigan, an operations section chief with the Oregon Department of Forestry, in charge of battling the blaze.
He noted that all weather factors were “negative for firefighters and positive for fire”.
Scientists say climate change amplifies droughts which create ideal conditions for wildfires to spread.
The National Interagency Fire Centre said the outlook was for “very hot, dry and unstable conditions across the inland Pacific Northwest, Northern Rockies and Plains into northern Minnesota”.
It said that nearly 20,000 firefighters and support personnel are struggling to contain fires raging across the Western states, with more than 2.5mn acres already having burned this year.
Firefighters in Canada, meanwhile, continued to battle dozens of blazes, including some 20 new ones in British Columbia province and about 15 new ones in northwest Ontario province.
Authorities in that province said a firefighter had died in hospital of an unspecified “medical emergency”.
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