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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Compare the size of your city to the fire
    Two firefighters stand alert in uniform facing opposite directions. Both are backlit by bright orange, yellow flames. The light obscures their faces. The shrub to the right and the machine to the left are silhouettes.
    Firefighters work as Park Fire burns near Chico, California, U.S. July 25, 2024.

    Topline:

    To get a sense of how large this fire is, we built a tool, which you can explore below, that allows you to enter an address and see the most current perimeter for the Park Fire drawn around that location. You can also overlay several other fires from the past, including the Camp Fire, which in 2018 destroyed Paradise, not far from where the Park Fire is raging now.

    Why it matters: The Park Fire just pushed California’s wildfire season into overdrive.

    It has grown rapidly since it started near Chico on July 24. Within two days, the blaze had consumed some 178,000 acres, then it doubled the next day. By Sunday, the fire had devoured more acres than all of this year’s other fires to date combined. Even more striking: The Park Fire had claimed close to 500% of the previous five-year average of acres burned by this point in the summer.

    The backstory: Up until the Park Fire started, the past two years have been milder than usual as wetter winters took the state out of a drought. For example, in 2022 and 2023, about 720,000 acres burned, which is likely to be exceeded this year.

    Go deeper: To see how California's biggest fires compare to where you live...

    The Park Fire just pushed California’s wildfire season into overdrive.

    It has grown rapidly since it started near Chico on July 24. Within two days, the blaze had consumed some 178,000 acres, then it doubled the next day. By Sunday, the fire had devoured more acres than all of this year’s other fires to date combined. Even more striking: The Park Fire had claimed close to 500% of the previous five-year average of acres burned by this point in the summer.

    To get a sense of how large this fire is, we built a tool, which you can explore below, that allows you to enter an address and see the most current perimeter for the Park Fire drawn around that location. You can also overlay several other fires from the past, including the Camp Fire, which in 2018 destroyed Paradise, not far from where the Park Fire is raging now.

    Up until the Park Fire started, the past two years have been milder than usual as wetter winters took the state out of a drought. For example, in 2022 and 2023, about 720,000 acres burned, which is likely to be exceeded this year. And while the number of people since 2022 who died from wildfires has not been as high as in previous years, 13 people lost their lives, including four last year who crashed in a helicopter accident, and one person who died this year in the Mina Fire in Mendocino County.

    Note: Fire perimeter last updated on Jul. 28 at 4:56 pm.
    Source: National Interagency Fire Center
    Credits: Jeremia Kimelman, CalMatters