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  • 9 hours ago
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration along with the National Interagency Fire Center have declared heightened wildfire hazards for seven states in the Western US. This declaration comes as a result of drought, low humidity levels, and high temperatures combining to create severe fire conditions in California, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, Colorado, and Oregon. Experts caution that the wildfire season in 2026 is expected to be one of the most perilous in recent years. FEMA is strategically positioning firefighting aircraft in anticipation of the peak danger period from June to August. Federal authorities alert that almost 70 million individuals in these seven states are at a considerable health risk due to wildfire smoke.
Transcript
00:00Seven western U.S. states are facing what scientists are calling one of the most dangerous wildfire conditions in recent
00:06history.
00:07NOAA and the National Interagency Fire Center have issued elevated wildfire danger declarations across California.
00:15Nevada, Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, Colorado, and Oregon.
00:22The combination is lethal, severe multi-month drought, record low humidity, and an intensifying early summer heat wave.
00:31Air quality in major western cities is already deteriorating from small blazes.
00:36FEMA is pre-positioning firefighting aircraft and crews ahead of the peak June through August window.
00:42Scientists warn that nearly 70 million Americans in these seven states face serious wildfire smoke health risk this summer.
00:50Wind-driven smoke can travel thousands of miles and degrade air quality across the entire country.
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