Homes burn during the Eaton Fire in Altadena, California' on January 8, 2025. - Photo AFP
LOS ANGELES – Rampaging wildfires around Los Angeles have killed at least two people, officials said Wednesday as terrifying blazes leveled whole streets, torching cars and houses in minutes.More than 1,000 buildings have burned in multiple wildfires that have broken out around America’s second biggest city, forcing tens of thousands of people from their homes.

Hurricane-force winds whipped up fireballs that leapt from house to house in the upmarket Pacific Palisades area, incinerating a swathe of California’s most desirable real estate favored by Hollywood celebrities.

Los Angeles County Fire Chief Anthony Marrone said his crews were overwhelmed by the scale and speed of the unfolding disasters.

“We’re doing the very best we can. But no, we don’t have enough fire personnel in LA County between all the departments to handle this,” he said.

The fire raging in Pacific Palisades had consumed aound 16,000 acres (6,500 hectares) as of Wednesday afternoon, taking 1,000 homes and businesses with it.

A 10,600-acre fire was burning around Altadena, north of the city, where flames tore through suburban streets, flattening homes and killing two people.

Evacuation orders were in place for around 70,000 people. A large number of people who did not heed warnings to leave had suffered “significant injuries,” Marrone said.

Vicious gusts pushed the flames, whipping red-hot embers hundreds of meters (yards), sparking new spot fires faster than firefighters could quell them.

As a pall of dark smoke hung over Los Angeles, downed trees and broken branches were hampering movement, and residents were urged to stay off the roads.

Los Angeles Department of Water and Power chief executive Janisse Quinones pleaded with people to save water after hydrants in Pacific Palisades ran dry.

“We’re fighting a wildfire with urban water systems, and that is really challenging,” she said.

President-elect Donald Trump took to his social media platform on Wednesday to claim — wrongly — that the lack of water was the result of the state’s environmental policies.

Trump said rainwater was being diverted “to protect an essentially worthless fish.”

In fact, much of Los Angeles’ water comes from the Colorado River, and farming — rather than residential use or firefighting — takes the lion’s share of all water that flows into Southern California.

President Joe Biden, who was in Los Angeles with California Governor Gavin Newsom, was briefed on what Biden called an “astounding” situation.

“We’re doing anything and everything and as long as it takes to contain these fires,” Biden told reporters.

Having razed perhaps hundreds of multi-million dollar homes, the Pacific Palisades fire looked set to be one of the costliest blazes on record.

Martin Sansing, 54, told AFP he has lived in Santa Monica canyon for 20 years and had never seen anything similar.

“We’re in a pretty urban area. We’re not like, on a hill or anything like that. I never imagined we would be affected,” he said.

“I grew up in Los Angeles, and Malibu used to burn every 10 or 15 years, but not this area.”

Sarahlee Stevens-Shippen, 69, spent the night at a friend’s house and returned to the canyon early morning to grab a few supplies.

“When I saw the glow of the fire coming over the mountain yesterday about eight o’clock, I took off. It had already jumped the coast highway nearby and some palm trees were catching on fire,” she said.

“You got the ashes to worry about in your lungs. You got your life to worry about with these 80 to 100 mile an hour gusts. We’ve just been in panic mode.”

Trees and vegetation around the Getty Villa were burned, but the structure and collections — including Greek and Roman antiquities — were spared, the museum said.

Wildfires are part of life in the US West and play a vital role in nature.

But scientists say human-caused climate change is altering weather patterns.

Southern California had two decades of drought that were followed by two exceptionally wet years, which sparked furious vegetative growth — leaving the region packed with fuel and primed to burn.

Meteorologist Daniel Swain said the fierce winds — which have gusted up to 100 miles (160 kilometers) an hour — are stronger than the usual seasonal Santa Ana winds, but are not unexpected.

“The winds are the driver, but the real catalyst… is this incredible antecedent dryness,” he said.

“The lack of rain and the anomalous warmth and dryness that we’ve seen the past six months. That’s something that we haven’t seen in records going back to the 1800s”. – AFP

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