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Utility says its equipment may have sparked California blaze evacuating 100,000

An SUV is parked in the evacuated residential area filled with heavy smoke from the Silverado Fire Monday, Oct. 26, 2020, in Irvine, Calif. A fast-moving wildfire forced evacuation orders for 60,000 people in Southern California on Monday as powerful winds across the state prompted power to be cut to hundreds of thousands to prevent utility equipment from sparking new blazes. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Southern California Edison said its equipment may have sparked a fast-moving wildfire that forced evacuation orders for some 100,000 people and seriously injured two firefighters on Monday as powerful winds across the state prompted power to be cut to hundreds of thousands to prevent just such a possibility.

A smoky fire
exploded in size to over 11 square miles (29 square kilometers) after
breaking out around dawn in Orange County, south of Los Angeles. Gusts
pushed flames along brushy ridges in Silverado Canyon and near houses in
the sprawling city of Irvine, home to about 280,000 residents. There
was no containment.

Two firefighters, one 26 and the other 31
years old, were critically injured while battling the blaze, according
to the county’s Fire Authority, which didn’t provide details on how the
injuries occurred. They each suffered second- and third-degree burns
over large portions of their bodies and were intubated at a hospital,
officials said.

In a report to the state Public Utilities
Commission, Southern California Edison said it was investigating whether
its electrical equipment caused the blaze. The brief report said it
appeared that a “lashing wire” may have struck a primary conductor, and
an investigation was under way.

The report came as SCE shut off
power to some 38,000 customers in five counties — including the fire
areas — as a safety precuation against gusts knocking down equipment or
hurling tree branches or other vegetation into power lines.

More
than 90,000 people in the fire area were under evacuation orders.
Nearby, a much smaller fire in the Yorba Linda area prompted the
evacuation of at least 10,000 people, officials said.

At the
Irvine-area fire, Kelsey Brewer and her three roommates decided to leave
their townhouse before the evacuation order came in. The question was
where to go in the pandemic. They decided on the home of her
girlfriend’s mother, who has ample space and lives alone.

“We
literally talked about it this morning,” Brewer said, adding that she
feels lucky to have a safe place to go. “We can only imagine how screwed
everyone else feels. There’s nowhere you can go to feel safe.”

Helicopters
dropping water and fire retardant were grounded for much of the
afternoon because strong winds made it unsafe to fly. However, a large
air tanker and other aircraft began making drops again several hours
before sunset.

In the northern part of the state, Pacific Gas
& Electric began restoring power to some of the 350,000 customers —
an estimated 1 million people — in 34 counties that were left in the
dark Sunday because of some of the fiercest winds of the fire season.

PG&E
said it had restored power to nearly 100,000 customers as winds eased
in some areas, with electricity to be back on at the other homes and
buildings by Tuesday night after crews make air and ground inspections
to make repairs and ensure it’s safe.

A dozen reports of damage had been received, PG&E said.

However, the fire threat was far from over in many parts of PG&E’s vast service area.

“We’re
already starting to see winds pick back up,” hitting 50 mph (80.4 kph)
in some regions with bone-dry humidity leading to extreme fire danger
Monday evening, said Scott Strenfel, PG&E’s head of meteorology.

The
winds were expected to calm Monday night before renewing again Tuesday,
the National Weather Service warned. Officials extended a red flag
extreme fire danger warning through 5 p.m. Tuesday for the region’s
eastern and northern mountainous areas.

The safety shut-offs
“probably did prevent dangerous fires last night. It’s almost impossible
to imagine that winds of this magnitude would not have sparked major
conflagrations in years past,” Daniel Swain, a climate scientist with
UCLA and the National Center for Atmospheric Research, said on Twitter.

A second round of gusts is predicted to sweep through the same areas Monday night,

Scientists
have said climate change has made California much drier, meaning trees
and other plants are more flammable. October and November are
traditionally the worst months for fires, but already this year 8,600
wildfires in the state have scorched a record 6,400 square miles (16,600
square kilometers) and destroyed about 9,200 homes, businesses and
other buildings. There have been 31 deaths.

The electricity
shutdowns marked the fifth time this year that Pacific Gas &
Electric, the nation’s largest utility, has cut power to customers to
reduce the risk of downed or fouled power lines or other equipment that
could ignite blazes amid bone-dry weather conditions and gusty winds.

The
conditions could equal those during devastating fires in California’s
wine country in 2017 and last year’s Kincade Fire that devastated Sonoma
County north of San Francisco last October, the National Weather
Service said. Fire officials said PG&E transmission lines sparked
that fire, which destroyed hundreds of homes and caused nearly 100,000
people to flee.

Many of this year’s devastating fires were started by thousands of dry lightning strikes, but some remain under investigation for potential electrical causes. While the biggest fires in California have been fully or significantly contained, more than 5,000 firefighters remain committed to 20 blazes, state fire officials said.

Rodriguez reported from San Francisco. Associated Press writer Amy Taxin in Orange County, California contributed to this report.