A new kind of pollution — wildfire smoke — can cause health issues
It’s a domino effect Southern Californians know all too well: When there’s extreme heat, there are fires. And when there are fires, there’s smoke. And when there’s smoke, there is insidious air pollution.
The pattern, caused by four fires still burning in Los Angeles, San Bernardino and Riverside counties, is producing columns of smoke that collapse, spreading lung-damaging soot for hundreds of miles.
After record-breaking heat and explosive fires over the Labor Day weekend, lingering fire clouds lowered temperatures considerably Tuesday, Sept. 8, by blocking the sun. But a moderate Santa Ana wind event starting Tuesday afternoon was expected to send desert winds through mountain canyons and into beach communities through Wednesday afternoon, the National Weather Service said.
The Santa Anas are not good news for firefighters battling the two most troublesome fires, El Dorado near Yucaipa, and Bobcat above Duarte. A red flag warning went into effect late Tuesday. Homes could be threatened if the winds carry flames down the canyons.
The coming hot winds — normally seen in October through December — are an anomaly for early September. That is part of the confusing weather pattern that not only hampers firefighting efforts but plays havoc with the air quality of 22 million basin residents.
“Anytime we have significant wildfires they produce a lot of smoke. Smoke is a mixture of all pollutants, including very small particles called PM2.5 that can be breathed deeply into the lungs,” said Jokay Ghosh, health effects officer for the South Coast Air Quality Management District.
In the mountain communities of San Bernardino County on Tuesday, as well as Redlands, Loma Linda and Yucaipa, the SCAQMD said the air was unhealthy, meaning a person’s asthma or heart condition could be exacerbated by going outside, Ghosh said.
In Riverside County, smoke from the 10,500-acre El Dorado fire caused a smoke and ash advisory on Tuesday for residents in the San Gorgonio Pass and western Riverside County.
Dr. Cameron Kaiser, Riverside County public health officer, said residents in those areas should avoid strenuous activity and remain indoors with the air conditioning on and the windows and doors closed. The air was unhealthy for most of the Coachella Valley and eastern Riverside County, the AQMD reported.
From Redondo Beach to Laguna Beach, air quality was good Tuesday, while the San Fernando and San Gabriel valleys experienced moderate air conditions.
With Santa Ana winds, they may blow away the smoke into the ocean or if they are weak, as predicted, they may not have the force to clear the air, air quality experts explained.
“A good piece of guidance is, if you smell smoke or see ash in your area, try to stay indoors as much as you can,” Ghosh said.
Wildfire smog is increasing and will only get worse, as climate change raises the temperatures on the ground. On Sunday, Woodland Hills reached 121 degrees — a record high.
More heat waves with higher temperatures are causing more wildfires across the state — a record 25 were burning Tuesday. So far this year, 2.2 million acres have charred, with eight deaths and 3,300 structures destroyed, a state record, and the fire season still has four months left, reported CalFire.
“People can try to deny climate change but now they are seeing it in front of their eyes and breathing the effects of climate change,” said Bill Magavern, policy director for the Coalition for Clean Air.
The particles or PM2.5 are one aspect. The other is the heat, which increases the production of ozone, a colorless gas that damages the lung’s elasticity.
Some preliminary studies show breathing particulate pollution from wildfires can make people more vulnerable to being infected by the coronavirus, and those who are infected can have more adverse health effects, Magavern said.
What burns so quickly and intensely in the latest wildfires are not mature trees but non-native grasses, said Rick Halsey, director of the California Chaparral Institute based in San Diego.
The El Dorado fire was started by a fireworks-like device set off during a gender-reveal photo shoot at El Dorado Ranch Park above Yucaipa, which is surrounded by grasses that caught fire and quickly spread.
Halsey said grasses are so dangerous because people don’t think they are dangerous. Most TV pictures of wildfires show trees on fire, which occurs mostly in dense forests, more often in Northern California.
“Fires burn hot. There is no way around it. And if there’s not a lot of wind, you get these giant columns that look like thunderheads but when they collapse, they spread the smoke and create winds in all directions,” Halsey explained.
In Oregon, smoke is wafting in from Siberian fires, he said. After the Cedar Fire in San Diego in 2003, which took 14 civilian lives, one firefighter’s life and blackened 273,246 acres, it took more than a week for the air to clear after the fire was out, Halsey said.
“With these big fires, the smoke has got to go somewhere,” he said.
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