Thursday, December 5, 2013

Minor Mt. Etna Eruptions


In this photo taken on Saturday, Nov. 16, 2013, Mt. Etna, Europe's most active volcano, spews lava during an eruption as seen from Acireale, near the Sicilian town of Catania, Italy.

Last week, I talked a little about Mt. Sinabung in Indonesia. This volcano had several minor eruptions, and from what I have read, has kept having very minor eruptions since then, with some more evacuations and the highest level of alert. Fortunately, there have been no reports that I have found on deaths or injuries.

This week, there was another eruption. This one occurred yesterday, and it wasn’t from one of the many volcanoes located in the Ring of Fire like Mt. Sinabung. This one is located in eastern Sicily in Italy, and it is the most active volcano in Europe. Its name is Mount Etna. There were no evacuations but an airport was closed and some ash fell on its neighboring cities of Bronte, Maniace, and Maletto, and it doesn’t pose an immediate threat.

Apparently, a new southeast crater had been created, and the eruption that occurred yesterday was from multiple fissures. But it is the 19th eruption in 2013 alone, with the last two occurring on Thursday, November 28th and on November 23rd.  The last major eruption occurred in 1992.


From the articles I read, the media made it seem like Mt. Etna’s recent eruptions aren’t something to worry about too much, but from the things I’ve learned in this class, it’s better to be safe than sorry. The public should still be alerted the possibility of a bigger, more damaging eruption. They should also be taught all the dangers that exist with volcanoes, including primary, secondary, and tertiary consequences of a volcano. Typhoon Haiyan also taught us that despite an area being used to certain hazards, tragedy can still occur when people don’t fully understand a hazard. 

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

image

Indonesia is known for its volcanic eruptions, and is part of the Ring of Fire. 74,000 years ago in Northern Sumatra, Mt. Toba erupted and created what is today’s largest volcanic lake. In West Java, 30 years ago, Mt. Krakatoa erupted, and become one of the most destructive volcanic events in history. In 2010, Mt. Sinabung erupted and though it only killed 2 people, 30,000 others were displaced. On Monday, this same volcano had 6 minor eruptions, causing it to be put on highest alert activity for volcanoes. This is the first sign of life from this volcano in three years, but they are predicting more eruptions, and so have moved 15,000 people out of the danger zones of the volcanoes.


Apparently, four other volcanoes have shown signs of activity in Indonesia. I think that this means that there will soon be other eruptions. The country needs to prepare for these possibilities, and as we’we've seen with previous disasters, need to educate their citizens on the kinds of dangers they pose, and what to do to stay safe. I will be watching out for more stories on volcanoes in Indonesia for the rest of the semester. 

Further Information on Typhoon Haiyan


As time passes since the overwhelming and powerful super-typhoon Haiyan (known to Philippine locals as Typhoon Yolanda) hit the grouping of western Pacific Ocean islands on the morning of November 8th, more and more information is revealed. News sources have been collecting stories from individuals who have survived the storm, and have retold their stories of tragedy and hope. I've read stories ranging from simple civilians (from construction workers to stay-at-home moms that sell banana sweets in local markets) to government officials of provinces and their capitals in the Philippines (such as the stories of Talcoban mayor Alfred Romualdez). And as seen in my last post, much is being discussed about the Philippines' future in terms of storm preparedness.
From some of these stories, we can really see how much people didn't understand or prepare for the severity of this storm. Though they knew it was going to be a bad storm, and even though the president, Benigno Aquino III, warned that the storm-surge was "a very real danger". But these individual stories I was ready really helped to solidify the idea that people really didn’t understand the term. There was a construction worker’s family who heard the news and warnings of the storm at their neighbor’s house, since they didn’t have a TV of their own, and heard the term “storm-surge” but none of them knew what it was. When they were figuring out where to go to protect themselves from the storm, they decided on a nearby school they had used for previous typhoons, despite the fact that they were told it was actually unsafe. To me, this means it was not communicated by the media and the government how powerful this storm was going to be, or why certain places that used to be safe for other storms are not safe anymore. This will probably make the transition into better constructed buildings hard, because people will find it hard to believe that storms will be this bad.

Part of preparing for future storms in the Philippines is planting mangrove trees, which could act as resistance and help to slow down any future storm-surges or tsunami waves. They will be using geohazard mapping to determine which areas are most vulnerable to these kinds of events.  

Wall Street Journal on Typhoon Haiyan
GMA News on Planting Mangroves after Typhoon Haiyan

Friday, November 22, 2013

After Typhoon Haiyan

Filpinos clear rubble from a hard-hit area in Tacloban on November 22. The death toll from the storm stands at more than 5,000, according to a government-run news agency.
It has been two weeks since the day that Typhoon Haiyan hit the Philippines. When I first wrote about it last week, the death total, while still heartbreaking, was at 2,275 people lost. Now, it seems that number has climbed to 5,235. CNN reports that 23,501 people have been injured by the storm and 1,613 are still missing. USA Today wrote that “a stench coming from piles of debris of what once were homes indicates that bodies remain trapped underneath despite the ongoing effort to bury victims”. Firemen are still collecting the bodies of the victims, and relief organizations are still bringing in supplies and providing aid, doing their best to help the survivors.

But most are still struggling, and don’t have consistent access to safe, clean water or to food or shelter. Workers and survivors across the country are working to clear the rubble and debris, and collect any usable material that they can find. Reconstruction and rebuilding have begun, but it will be a slow process.
In fact, the action plan the government in Philippine capital city of Manila is predicted to include three to five years of reconstruction and rehabilitation, and that’s just in the hardest hit areas.
A boy climbs across debris in Tacloban on November 20.
But governments within the whole of the Philippines don’t just want to recover from Typhoon Haiyan, they want to learn from it, because despite having about 20 tropical storms a year, the Philippines were still ill-prepared for this storm.

People want houses and other buildings to be constructed to be able to withstand such storms, and to put into place legal standards so that buildings in the future are constructed in a more safe and resilient way. During the storm, even evacuation shelters collapsed, so those need to be rebuilt to a better standard as well. But that won’t be enough either. They need to prevent any structures from being built too close to the shoreline in order to minimize the death and injury totals, and this will also give people a bit more time to react and respond to a disaster if they are not in the immediately affected areas (as in the shoreline). The city council in a Philippine city called Tanauan actually passed a resolution “making a non-build zone from the shoreline to 150 feet inland”. They also plan to “move15,000 of the town’s 40,000 residents to new areas”. This means that many of the residents live in unsafe areas, or areas that are most likely to be the most affected in future storms, so that they may decrease the death and injury tolls in this way also.

Another problem is education. For example, people were warned about the potential for a “storm-surge” after the initial storm. A storm surge is when the water level near the shore rises and comes onto shore. In the case of this storm, this wall of water came crashing down and destroyed the Philippine city Talcoban, and is responsible for much of the deaths occurring there. People don’t think of storm-surge as the dangerous hazard that they should, and should actually be thinking about it just like they would with a tsunami.
A man fans the flames of a fire in Tanauan, Philippines, on November 19.
One of the biggest challenges and lessons that need to be learned from Typhoon Haiyan was the general outlooks and attitudes people in the Philippines had towards storms. As USA Today put it, they are often “stubbornly lax”. For example, many people refused to evacuate in the first place, before the storm hit. Even afterwards, people refuse to leave the areas of their destroyed homes, and fully intend to rebuild there, even if that area would be highly vulnerable to future storms.


Overall, the Philippines is still in great need of aid, and I hope that they can overcome such a tragedy and all its consequences. Most of all, I hope that we are all able to learn from this event and better prepare ourselves for all hazards so they don’t become disasters.  


People in Tacloban march in the rain November 19 during a procession calling for courage and resilience among survivors.

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Typhoon Haiyan Hits the Philippines


Residents of Victory Island near Guiuan town receive aid

At 5:00 AM on Friday, November 8th, the worst typhoon in recorded history hit the Philippines. This storm, according to many sources, was more powerful and more destructive that Hurricane Katrina in 2005 (three and a half times more powerful, actually, and was big enough to stretch from Spain to Sweden, according to CNN). Its winds reached 195 mph at landfall with gusts rising to 235 mph, which surpassed that of record-holding Hurricane Camille, which hit the Gulf Coast in 1969 with 190 mph winds.

Government officials and meteorologists had predicted it to be one of the worst storms ever seen, and Philippine communities have dealt with hazards such as typhoons, hurricanes, and tsunamis before. Most communities had already had disaster committees in place before this one, called Typhoon Haiyan, or to the Philippines, Typhoon Yolanda. Relief agencies are often on standby in Philippines and other areas that are most likely to be hit and hugely impacted by these events. Knowing that this was coming and having warning systems already in place, 700,000 people were able to evacuate before the storm made landfall.

Before and after - Anibong town near Tacloban

But they were still not prepared for the kind of devastation Haiyan caused. Even the shelters to which people evacuated to did not all stand up to its force. Many of these shelters were destroyed and people died there as well. People feared that the death toll would be upwards of around 10,000 people. So far, the recorded deaths seem to be more around 2,275.

One of the worst-hit cities in the Philippines was Tacloban, where a 16-foot-high wall of ocean water slammed down and decimated everything in the city. In total, across the whole country, about 80,000 homes had been, leaving 582,000 people homeless.

Devastation in Tacloban city

The storm itself was disastrous, but there are several other factors and consequences of this storm that contributed to the death toll, the wall of water that came afterward being one of them. It came suddenly, and people got swept off their feet and washed away in the powerful waves. Then, with this wall of water, came debris. Debris of all kinds came rushing in, killing many in their wake. Once the waters receded all this debris sat in piles and piles and piles, and people were indeed trapped. In Talcoban alone, they found 100 bodies.

However, the death toll could keep climbing due to lack of food and water. People who survived the initial storm and its immediate aftermath could end up dying from dehydration and starvation. Relief and aid organizations are doing what they can, but there have been several delays. According to my sources, a lot of the aid supplies are in the country, but are unable to reach the areas that need it most simply because of the destruction Haiyan caused. Vehicles can’t get to the areas because roads have been destroyed and the ones that weren't are blocked by debris. For most places, it now takes 10 hours for relief agencies to get there.

From ground level - Cargo ships washed ashore are seen four days after super typhoon Haiyan hit Anibong town, Tacloban cityThere are several other health concerns that organizations have to try to address. There are expectant mothers who need care for themselves and their soon-to-arrive children, people with conditions such as heart disease need medication. Water could be contaminated and lead to infectious diseases. Unsanitary conditions could lead to cholera. An epidemic is a real concern for the living in the Philippines right now.
Health isn’t the only issue either. There is news of looting of places like damaged grocery stores occurring in people’s desperation to find food and water, and in one instance, a rice warehouse got stormed by crowds and a wall collapsed, killing eight people.

Guiuan on November 11Politics also plays a role. Reports say that aid convoys have been attacked by rebels within the Philippines, by members of the New People’s Army, the militant wing of the Communist Party of the Philippines. Obviously, this doesn't help the problems relief organizations are already having with getting supplies to the affected communities.

Residents carry bags of rice from a Tacloban warehouse that they stormed November 11 because of a food shortage.


Hopefully, ways can soon be found to more quickly, effectively, and safely transport supplies and give the aid needed to all those in the Philippines that find themselves without water, or food, or shelter. Hopefully, we can get people back on their feet, and return the Philippines to some level of normalcy in the near future.


Sources and other Resources 

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Earthquakes in Israel



From the Guardian Article: "An Israeli soldier searches in the rubble of a school during a drill simulating an earthquake in Holon, Israel, in 2012. More drills are expected soon. Photograph: Ariel Schalit/AP"

Recently, there have been a series of minor earthquakes in Israel. There have been six total in the last week. Most were too minor to even feel, but were recorded by seismologists. A few were big enough to notice, but none were big enough to cause any damage or injuries. The biggest one was at a magnitude of 3.6.

There is a fault line running through Israel, along with a few other countries like Syria and Turkey, as well as from the Red Sea to the Dead Sea and up the Jordan River Valley. This fault is the Dead Sea Transform and it separates the African Plate and the Arabian Plate. Apparently, there is a major earthquake approximately every 100 years or so along this fault, and the last really major earthquake was in 1837, which had a magnitude of 7.0 and killed 4,000 people. So they are quite overdue for another one. And even though it's impossible to predict when it will happen, Professor Amotz Agnon of the Earth Sciences Institute at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem said that this string of minor earthquakes is "a reminder that we are heading for a big earthquake." (NY Times) 

Because of these recent tremors, the government officials and scientists have not only been alerting the their citizens, but have also put into motion drills to practice evacuation and teaching them how to respond to an earthquake to increase safety and decrease the chances of human injury or loss. The biggest concern, however, is how the buildings have been constructed. Essentially, they are old buildings with weak materials that are very likely to collapse and cause injuries, so the public has been advised to run outdoors during an earthquake. There will be more drills in schools and public instruction will be updated. Money has been set aside to rebuild or retrofit these buildings, but unfortunately nothing has been done. 

I still think this is a good example of preparedness because even though they don't know when it will occur, they are getting the public ready to react and respond in case such a disaster does occur. They are taking steps to help decrease human loss and physical damage.


New York Times on the Israel Earthquakes

 Washington Post on the Israel Earthquakes
The Guardian on the Israel Earthquakes

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Building Collapses in India


In the last few months, India has been experiencing a lot of building collapses.  Just a few days ago, a residential building in New Dehli collapse, killing at least one person and with two people in the hospital. In April, a multistory building in Thane (a city in the Mumbai region) collapsed, killing several. Also in April, a building in Mumbai killed 61 people, and there was also a garment factory in Dhaka, Bangledesh that collapsed during the work day, killing 1,127 people in what the NY Times called "the deadliest disaster in the history of the garment industry".

Several reasons for these collapses have been found, but to me the common factor between all these buildings is the "substandard" material being used to build them. India has such a large population, but with so many people with low incomes, they can't afford to build safe structures, let alone ones that might survive a natural disaster. Construction regulation also seems to be a major problem. In the case of the garment factory, the owners didn't build it to safety standards to begin with, then began adding more illegally constructed floors and power generators that shook the building whenever they were on. Despite these safety issues, the factory owners ordered their employees to keep working. Clearly, the enforcement on building regulations needs to be increased.

These recent building collapses in India speak a lot about hazard management in less developed countries. Safety seems to low on the priority list. I feel like the risk workers in these areas take are mostly involuntary. I'm sure they would all rather work in a safe building, but because having any kind of job is better than no job, especially in just a poor area, I could argue that many feel the risks of not having a job are far greater than having one, even in unsafe conditions.

NY Times Article Right After the Dhaka Collapse
NY Times Follows Up on the Dhaka Collapse
CNN on the Residential Building Collapse in New Dehli

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Today's Earthquake in the Philippines








Today, an earthquake occurred in the Philippines. It was reported as about a 7.1 or a 7.2 magnitude quake, with a an epicenter located near Tagbilaran City in the country's Bohol Province. The amount reported dead keeps rising, with the current number (current meaning about 11AM Central Time) being about 85, 69 of which were all from Tagbilaran City.33 people are missing, many probably trapped in rubble. 164 have been reported injured (CNN). According to a government official that monitors earthquakes, it was "the strongest tremor felt in the area in the last 23 years" (BBC News).

Many of the deaths occurred to do several different things, such as damaged or collapsed buildings (such as a market roof that fell), stampedes of people, and a fishing port that collapsed. Power was cut in certain areas, roads spit, and historic buildings that have been around since the 1500's or 1600's were extensively damaged or collapsed as well.

Although it was unfortunate to occur on a day that was supposed to be joyous, where many in the Philippines were celebrating the Muslim holiday of Eid ul Adha, it could have been quite a bit worse had it not occurred on a holiday. It was reported that there could have been many more deaths if it wasn't because on this holiday, schools are closed. This means that large amounts of students would not have been packed into a school building during the earthquake. Less people in one area means less of a chance of a high death rates during this kind of event.

Some things that I think, based on class lectures, need to be done after this event. Short term, as much relief as possible needs to be sent in. According to the articles in the links below, the Philippine Red Cross was indeed sent it. But I also thinks that if a warning system isn't already established, they should quickly find a way to alert as many people as possible as fast as possible. This is because of the possibility of a tsunami caused by this earthquake. They need to be alerted as soon as possible if one is coming, so that they may prepare and potentially leave the area. Related to this is the set up of evacuation routes, so that people can efficiently and safely travel out of risk areas. It also needs to be relayed to the public that aftershocks are common after an earthquake and fires are also a common hazard. Without this kind of information, more deaths could occur even after the initial quake. Though I am not sure how well the Philippine government is doing overall to respond to this disaster, and we may have to wait a few days to find out, the President is going to visiting areas affected by the quake. It is important for the government to show support in this kind of event so that the people may trust and support them back.

Update: By 3:30 PM Central Time, the death toll rose to 93 people.






Thursday, October 3, 2013

The Aftermath of Fukushima

I found something that really interested me today on my favorite news site source. I've always really enjoyed the "Through Photos" type of articles on the Guardian's website, where they take a story of some kind and tell it through photographs, which I find to be a very effective in showing the consequences of a disaster. The one that I am providing a link to at the bottom of this post shows photos of what the evacuation zones of the Fukushima disaster now currently look like. This includes shots of abandoned towns, abandoned houses, and even of people who refused or decided to stay within the evacuation zones, a couple of which have decided to take on the responsibility of taking care of animals that had been left behind when their owners fled the area. So I have just included a few images and a link to the original article just because I find these images powerful and enlightening.



Tuesday, October 1, 2013

The BP Oil Disaster - Three years later

In April 2010, a fire started and caused an explosion on an oil rig called Deepwater Horizon, owned by the large gas company BP. It killed 11 people and injured 17, and eventually the rig sank in 5,000 ft of water, causing a five-mile long oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico. A spill emergency response system failed to activate when it began, and the well was found to be leaking 1,000 barrels of oil every day. Thtis spill caused not only billions of dollars in monetary damage, but also massive environmental damage, including a large leap in turtle deaths (all of the sea turtle species in the Gulf of Mexico are threatened or endangered), disrupting breeding grounds for many species, coating many individuals of various species living in that gulf with the oil, and created “dead zones” where marine life cannot survive. The spill was expected to have long lasting effects on the Gulf.

This week, three years after this disaster, we are still dealing with this. BP has returned to court and this trial is meant to determine whether the company practiced “gross negligence” during the disaster. It must be determined whether or not BP did everything they could to best respond to the disaster and to cap the well from which the oil was spilling, as well as how much oil escaped into the ocean. The plaintiffs are arguing that BP had “wasted time” trying to cap the well and most of the plans they did try failed. They also say that before the event, BP didn't even have a plan to respond to a potential disaster such as this. The defendants say that that BP did their best, and tried every plan possible, and that their strategy was agreed upon but other companies in their business.


Though this environmental disaster occurred years ago, I think it is still important to look at it today and discuss it within this blog. Even though the event is no lingering occurring, we are still dealing with its consequences. It also shows how that the true extent of the damages of a disaster may not be known until long after the event. For example, it is just now being determined by the court hearings that are occurring exactly how much oil was spilled, and who is to blame, and even why it happened. Years later, we still need to explore how the disaster was (or was not) prevented or even made worse. Another example of why it is still important to look at this disaster and its follow-up is because it is was almost solely due to human error. There were reports of a leak before the actual disaster itself, showing BP’s negligence: they failed to act despite warning signs, and I feel like this is a huge factor in how much damage occurs in any disaster.  


Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Typhoon Usagi Hits Southern China, the Philipines, Taiwan and Hong Kong


According to The Guardian news source, “an average of 20 typhoons hit the Philippines ever year. In 2011, typhoon Washi killed 1,200 people, destroyed more than 10,000 homes and displaced a further 300,000 residents. Bopha, the strongest storm to hit last year, flattened three coastal towns on the southern island of Mindanao, killing 1,100 people and destroyed crops, property, and infrastructure." (Source)

This year, forecasters predicted what was first called a super typhoon. It had winds up to 127 mph and after passing between the Philippines and Taiwan, was set to hit Hong Kong, with a strong chance of it hitting southern China. It started out with winds past 150 mph, but those winds started calming down to winds mostly around 109 mph, so it was then classified as a severe typhoon.

I believe that due to the storms in the past few years, the government and people of the Philippines have learned how to better deal with this kind of hazard. Before the storm hit, they began evacuating northern coastal villages, suspending ferry services and called in fishing boats. They made preparatory emergency response procedures in southern areas and also sent storm alerts to many of the provinces in parts of the Philippines. They cut off power and communications, hospitals prepared for a possible influx of patients and they began stocking up on food and water. Hong Kong and China began shutting down flights and shipping, as well as travel between China and Taiwan. Fishing boats were asked by the Guangdong (a southern Chinese province) asked fishing boats to head in, as well as in Shanwei, and other provinces also took precautionary measures by evacuating their citizens.

I think that all these procedures are a really good example of knowing people knowing what kind of hazard-prone areas they live in and setting up warning systems, evacuation, and reactionary plans to those hazards. It is, I believe, a crucial step in minimizing not only financial damages but also, and most importantly, human losses. As we learned in the Disaster Simulation game, putting in warning systems greatly helped prevent loss of life.

However, more precautionary measures could have been taken, in my opinion. Though the typhoon itself didn't kill too many people, the winds and rain increased an already heavy monsoon season in that region, and created a surplus of landslides that hit several towns in the Philippines  which then ended up killing a total of around 47 people. I feel like, knowing how this kind of season works, things could have been done to the land most likely to create a landslide, lands that were probably already very steep and with looser soil. I think that some kind of “breaker” (like trees act as breakers for wind and storms) for the ground could have slowed the moving land and decrease momentum, and thereby decreasing the impact of the landslides. I am no expert in this kind of thing, and have zero idea of this kind of thing is possible. There may have also been monetary reasons why this kind of thing wasn't done. If the governments or towns and villages in place in the Philippines could not have afforded such secondary measures, that could be part of the reason why the landslides ended up being as bad as they were. I think it is also a could example of how while a disaster itself can cause damage, it can also start a sort of chain reaction, where secondary events can cause just as much damage or more. 


Thursday, September 12, 2013

A New Way to Help Prevent Disaster in Kenya

Kenya is home to 41 million people, with about 17 million going without access to safe drinking water. And in any area, let alone one with such a large and growing population, it goes without saying that that is really, really problematic. In an area that is already dry and arid, this problem is intensified when droughts start occurring.

Citizens of Turkana County, Kenya wait in line at a relief center

Difficulties surrounding water safety (such as purifying water) and security (like making sure there is enough water for everyone) have been a recurring prominent problem in Africa, and with the increasing climate change, water has become a growing concern not just in other less developed countries, but in more developed ones as well.

However, Kenya has found a new resource that can help them to tackle these droughts and potentially even prevent future ones. The discovery of this resource was helped by advanced satellite exploration technology (specifically, a groundwater mapping project) under the name of GRIDMAP (Groundwater Resources Investigation for Drought Mitigation in Africa Programme), headed by UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) in partnership with the government of Kenya and with the financial support of the government of Japan. This technology “combines remote sensing, seismic and conventional groundwater information to explore and map groundwater occurrence over large areas in short periods of time”, according to the UNESCO’s website article on the subject.

Drilling to confirm the aquifers
The resources they discovered were confirmed locations of two very large aquifers (the Lotikipi Basin Aquifer and the Lodwar Basin Aquifer) underground that have been collecting water from rain that falls in Kenya. These two sources could prove to completely change the country’s continuous water safety issues and provide relief during droughts. Though the water found in these aquifers still need to be assessed and tested, this is still a huge step forward and I believe that even if the water is currently unsafe to drink from directly, I’m sure there every effort will be made to use this water in some way to help the people of Kenya and decrease water-related deaths.

I believe this discovery is important and related to environmental hazards because it provides a good example of people knowing that there is a problem occurring and although there may not be an immediate solution, they are working to provide future generations a way to combat and even prevent future hazards. One of the reasons why the discoveries of these aquifers is so exciting is because of the potential to create underground irrigations systems that can run through the country and provide water to crops and drinking water for livestock. So not only could this help with droughts but other disasters as well, such as famine. Hopefully we can find other such resources around the world. 

CNN Reports the Discovery
NYTimes on the New Water Resource
UNESCO on the Aquifers in Kenya

Friday, September 6, 2013

Yosemite National Park


Vernal Fall of the Merced River in Yosemite
Yosemite  National Park is 1,200 square miles of protected wilderness in the state of California, ranging from waterfalls and canyons to the well-known sequoia tree forests. The park is home to more than 400 species of animal and is full of all kinds of plant life. However, much of the western United States has recently been at high risk of fires, and Yosemite was no exception. About a week and a half ago, the risk of fire turned into reality and what grew into a very large fire began to burn within the park. By now, it is supposedly “80% contained” , but at the cost of 371 square miles of land damage and $81 million spent to combat the fire (which from my understanding did not include any property or monetary loss of businesses and civilians). It is now one of the largest wildfires in California’s history.
                                                                                                                                         
Right away, investigators and fire fighters had ruled out lightning as the cause due to the lack of storms in the area. And now, just today, investigations have revealed that what caused the fire was in fact a hunter that had somehow lost control of his campfire. Before the start of this wildfire, there had been rules in place to keep campfires within designated grounds to prevent such a thing from happening, so I am curious to see what the reason was behind this hunter starting a fire to begin with, as well as how he lost control of it.

sdfsf
Flames sweeping through the Stanislaus National Forest, on
the western edge of Yosemite
The British news source called The Guardian says that the governor of California had declared a state of emergency because of this week-long fire. The concern is that it will damage water and electrical supply. This is a good example of when a hazard event occurs, it has more consequences than it may seem. The reason why they worry about this fire’s effect on water and electricity is because it is still burning and could reach the buildings that supply these resources to the state. If that were to happen that could cause, I imagine, even more damage than just what is physically burned by the fire. Lack of water and power, in my opinion, means more money spent in getting them up and running again, as well as what needs to be done in order to somehow get people these things until the problem is fully resolved. I believe that a lack of water could cause a lot of health problems amongst the state’s residents. Beyond that, after this tremendously damaging fire, I have to wonder if tourism rates will drop because a lot of the park got burned, creating less of a reason for tourists to come, and therefore, in the long term, affect that area’s economy.

The Guardian on the Yosemite Fires
San Francisco Mayor Declares State of Emergency
ABC News - Hunter Causes Yosemite Fire
National Park Service - Information on Yosemite