BSS
  01 Mar 2024, 18:09

Texas battling largest wildfire in its history

HOUSTON, March 1, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - Texas emergency crews were struggling
Thursday to contain the largest wildfire in the US state's history, with the
blaze killing at least two people and scorching a million acres as it raged
out of control.

The Texas A&M Forest Service said five major fires, fueled by an unseasonably
hot winter and ferocious winds, were actively burning across the state's
northern area known as the Texas panhandle.

The largest, the Smokehouse Creek Fire, started on Monday, grew to a record
1,075,000 acres (435,000 hectares) in size, and was just three percent
contained, the forest service said.

With Smokehouse Creek merging with another blaze, it has now become the
state's largest-ever wildfire, surpassing the East Amarillo Complex disaster
that torched 907,000 acres in 2006.

A 44-year-old truck driver died in an Oklahoma City hospital on Thursday,
having been rescued near her smoke-engulfed truck in Smokehouse Creek on
Tuesday, according to several local media, citing a Texas public safety
department official.

While preventive evacuations were ordered across multiple localities, the
body of an 83-year-old woman was found in the city of Stinnett, a Hutchinson
County emergency services spokesperson told ABC News.

She also said about 20 structures in Stinnett had been razed by the fire.

A 120-year-old Texas ranch said it lost 80 percent of its 32,000-acre
property near the area of the largest fire.

"The loss of livestock, crops, and wildlife, as well as ranch fencing and
other infrastructure throughout our property as well as other ranches and
homes across the region is, we believe, unparalleled in our history," the
managers of Turkey Track Ranch said in a statement posted on its website.

Governor Greg Abbott on Tuesday issued a disaster declaration for 60 Texas
counties, a move that frees up resources to battle the fires.

President Joe Biden, while visiting the southern border, told reporters that
500 federal personnel were working on fire suppression in Texas.

"I directed my team to do everything possible to help protect the people in
the communities threatened by these fires," Biden said, promising federal
support to Texas and neighboring Oklahoma while also slamming those who deny
climate change.

"I love some of my Neanderthal friends who still think there's no climate
change," he said.

Cities across the United States and Canada saw record temperatures in
February, with some experiencing summer-like heat. An El Nino weather pattern
is at play, in addition to climate change, according to experts.