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Fires in Santa Rosa and Napa


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2017 Oct 10, 7:12am   10,904 views  50 comments

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http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/10/09/santa-rosa-fire-how-a-sudden-firestorm-obliterated-a-city/

If patients could get out of bed on their own, they did, she said. “If not, we grabbed people from their beds and put them in wheelchairs.”

The fire came perilously close to Kaiser Santa Rosa medical center and its huge liquid oxygen and diesel tanks. Firefighters weren’t sure they could stave off the blaze that was engulfing the adjacent mobile home park called “Journey’s End,” she said.


#fire

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16   BayArea   2017 Oct 10, 7:17pm  

Why so many fires at the same time across the state? Something like 10 major fires burning right now.
17   Patrick   2017 Oct 10, 7:21pm  

This is another good reason to support my plan to create a city with good jobs up at Klamath:

https://patrick.net/post/1310664?offset=0#comment-1446089
No fires there.
18   MrMagic   2017 Oct 10, 7:54pm  

KimJongUn says
I wonder if stone buildings with metal roofs and metal shutters would've survived this type of event.


Thinking the same thing. Brick structures with clay tile roofs.
19   Patrick   2017 Oct 10, 8:11pm  

They need to be earthquake-proof as well. So maybe not brick and tile.
20   WookieMan   2017 Oct 10, 8:19pm  

Patrick says
They need to be earthquake-proof as well. So maybe not brick and tile.

Boom! And there's the god damn California problem. Beautiful weather, but too much extracurricular mother nature bull shit. I'll take a little winter and the tiny, tiny risk of a tornado where I'm at. I'm over exaggerating of course, but still, an entire neighborhood burned down. That just shouldn't happen today.
21   curious2   2017 Oct 11, 3:57am  

BayArea says
Why so many fires at the same time across the state?


A recent heat wave broke records, and the state had recently a 5-year drought that left a lot of dead vegetation. Many have blamed global warming.

Patrick says
They need to be earthquake-proof as well. So maybe not brick and tile.


Reinforced concrete.

KimJongUn says
I wonder if stone buildings with metal roofs and metal shutters would've survived this type of event.


Construction materials can make a huge difference. Use metal soffits instead of wood. Use non-flammable roof material (e.g. tile or anything else that doesn't burn). Do not have wooden perimeter fences connecting to exterior walls. Do not have shrubbery near exterior walls.

You can design and build for anything. Consider a heat pump moving water from below ground through tubes in walls and roof, to prevent the house becoming an oven.
22   RC2006   2017 Oct 11, 9:22am  

The answer to how to build in fire zones is simple, build hobbit homes.

http://www.viralnovelty.net/company-builds-pre-fab-hobbit-houses-3-days-can-actually-live/
23   Patrick   2017 Oct 11, 7:10pm  

http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Where-fires-burning-Northern-California-Napa-where-12264391.php
Some cool footage on that page, including a guy driving through the fires.
24   NoYes   2017 Oct 11, 7:35pm  

New cheap burned out land for Democratic voting homeless encampments .... (not close to his urban pad) and use the billion from trump to finish the bullet train to nowhere ...use whats left for more Trump Bashing ads.....at the same time punish hard all those brown mocking climate deniers....where is your priorities anyway? Are you a true leftist or not ....stand up to be counted - but not for the USA flag.
25   Dan8267   2017 Oct 12, 8:08am  

Patrick says
Fires in Santa Rosa and Napa


The fires are yet another effect of climate change. Yes, all the trolls will say that fires happened before climate change. And violence happened before Islamic terrorism, but terrorism does make the world a more violent place. Climate change made the fires much, much worse.

Wired: The Napa Fire Is a Perfectly Normal Apocalypse
Climate change makes wet seasons wetter and hot seasons hotter—which builds fuel. “Based on analysis using climate model projections, the frequency of Santa Ana events is uncertain,” Jin says. “But all the models agree that the intensity of Santa Ana events is going to be much stronger.”

Models say the same thing about sea level rise and hurricanes. A continent away from the fires in California, cities along the Gulf of Mexico and in the Caribbean have been battered by tropical cyclones, one after the other. This year, ocean water heated by a warming climate, unusually wet weather, and a lack of the vertical wind shear that can tame a big storm combined to produce an anomalous season. It has already been a fire season and a hurricane season that are, as researchers say, consistent with models of a changing climate.


Los Angeles Times: The climate-change fire alarm from Northern California
Big deadly fires are nothing new to California, particularly during fire season when the Santa Ana or Diablo winds blow hot and dry, making tinder out of trees and bushes that have been baking all summer long.

But the firestorm now raging through Northern California isn’t the typical wildfire. For one thing, it’s not just one fire but close to two dozen. For another, these fires are not only threatening hard-to-reach rural or mountains area, but they also have torn through suburban neighborhoods.

This is not just bad luck. Coming on the heels of other large-scale natural disasters — Houston inundated by a slow-moving tropical storm, swaths of Florida and the Caribbean ripped to shreds by a monster hurricane, much of Puerto Rico leveled by an equally powerful hurricane, a handful of Western states swept by massive fires that burned up millions of acres — one can’t help but see a disturbing pattern emerge. Those superstorms that scientists warned would result from climate change? They are here. The day of reckoning isn’t in the future. It is now.

All of those factors are exacerbated by the warming world. Hotter summers yield more fuel for fires and stronger winds to fan the flames. And this summer was California’s hottest on record, a milestone dramatically illustrated when San Francisco hit 106 degrees on Sept. 1 during a statewide heat wave.

Similarly, scientists say climate change doesn’t cause hurricanes, but it can make them bigger and more destructive. Higher air temperatures mean more evaporation and heavier rains outside of drought zones, and warmer seas intensify the size and fury of the storms themselves. It’s a double whammy that has contributed to an unusually severe hurricane season this year.


So what's the cost of climate change in Santa Rosa for this year? Well, there are Looters and price gougers demonstrating that climate change both increases violent crime and increases the costs of general goods. But the larger cost is estimated at $65 billion in residential property alone. That's a mighty big tab for a single consequence of climate change, especially since that tab is only one of many, many tabs that are going to come in.

In the not-so-distant future, climate change will cost America alone over $1 trillion per year every year. That's about $6666 per tax payer per year. More so if you earn more. And those are just direct costs that don't include the lost of economic productivity, which could be the much larger than $1 trillion per year. So tell me again how letting pollution go uncheck saves you money.

To put this in perspective, the direct costs to the U.S. alone will easily be over 5% of our GDP. The indirect costs may be much higher. Climate change is an economy killer. Just because dumb asses don't record costs properly on ledgers doesn't make those real-world costs disappear.

#climateChange
26   RWSGFY   2017 Oct 12, 8:48am  

Patrick says
They need to be earthquake-proof as well. So maybe not brick and tile.


Concrete monolith then.
27   Ceffer   2017 Oct 12, 9:23am  

It is a scientific fact that worsening menstrual periods are caused by global warming. In cold weather, there are no SJWs or IHLs.
28   Dan8267   2017 Oct 12, 9:52pm  

Ceffer says
In cold weather, there are no SJWs or IHLs.


You've obviously never been to Boston.
29   BayArea   2017 Oct 13, 12:04am  

Is this arson or what?

How do you explain so many fires so far apart?


30   WookieMan   2017 Oct 13, 8:27am  

BayArea says
Is this arson or what?

How do you explain so many fires so far apart?

A little law and order intro music here.....

I don't think this is what you're implying. But it would be a good narrative. The fire department or whatever resources that would be in charge of putting these out is intentionally setting the fires. What's the end goal you ask? More resourced earmarked to put these fires out. More resources come flooding in and then over the years there are fewer and fewer fires are occurring. Yet the increase in funds allowed those at the top to pump up their salaries and hire their buddies. And without a depression, good luck politically reducing 1st responder's money. It's a non-starter.

Tin foil hat stuff, but would probably be a pretty good episode.
31   Ceffer   2017 Oct 13, 10:22am  

Dan8267 says
Ceffer says
In cold weather, there are no SJWs or IHLs.


You've obviously never been to Boston.

Well, one set of assertion fallacies deserves another.
32   joshuatrio   2017 Oct 14, 8:41am  

Took this shot leaving SFO yesterday. This is normally a crystal clear view of the city, but the air pollution from the fires is really bad. And no, that's not the morning fog. That was taken around 2pm.

33   joshuatrio   2017 Oct 14, 8:42am  

Other fires that I caught from the air.
34   Y   2017 Oct 14, 8:57am  

The economy will reap the benefit of 65 billion worth of new housing construction, not to mention commercial rebuilding and unemployment dropping due to massive reconstruction effort.

Dan8267 says
But the larger cost is estimated at $65 billion in residential property alone.
Dan8267 says
Climate change is an economy killer.
35   Y   2017 Oct 14, 9:03am  

Like the fundamentalists and the Rapture, Climate change promoters are actively working to make their predictions, and the accompanying climate change cash cow, come true.

BayArea says
Is this arson or what?

How do you explain so many fires so far apart?
36   Patrick   2017 Oct 14, 10:11am  



I took this near Chico yesterday. Blurry bc from a moving bus, just a big burnt area.
37   WookieMan   2017 Oct 14, 10:42am  

BlueSardine says
The economy will reap the benefit of 65 billion worth of new housing construction, not to mention commercial rebuilding and unemployment dropping due to massive reconstruction effort.

Dan8267 says
But the larger cost is estimated at $65 billion in residential property alone.
Dan8267 says
Climate change is an economy killer.

Correct. I bet the insurance companies hate it, but if these events are indeed from global warming, they're very likely to have a positive impact on GDP. Three hurricanes, two hit US states and two ravaged multiple US territories. Massive property loss from fires in the West. 2017 Q4 with the holidays and all this rebuilding could be a big number.
38   Dan8267   2017 Oct 14, 5:09pm  

WookieMan says
but if these events are indeed from global warming, they're very likely to have a positive impact on GDP. Three hurricanes, two hit US states and two ravaged multiple US territories. Massive property loss from fires in the West. 2017 Q4 with the holidays and all this rebuilding could be a big number.


So if I break the windows in everyone's houses, the GDP goes up?
www.youtube.com/embed/0q-lEATP-9Y

Replacing destroyed goods does not increase the wealth of a society. It does not even maintain the wealth of the society because of the Second Law of Thermodynamics. No, breaking a window and replacing it, burning a house and building a new one, getting cancer and curing it results in a net loss of wealth to society.

If such things actually increased wealth as Keynesians believe, then ANTIFA would be heroes. Just let those thugs burn down entire cities and the good times will roll. Why does common sense never get applied to economics. It's not magic. It's arithmetic.
39   Y   2017 Oct 14, 6:02pm  

Cities are borne, and cities die.
People are borne, and people die.
Industries are borne, and industries die.
Homes are built, and homes are eventually destroyed.
It's all the cycle of existence...

WookieMan says
Correct. I bet the insurance companies hate it, but if these events are indeed from global warming, they're very likely to have a positive impact on GDP.
40   Y   2017 Oct 14, 6:07pm  

If the goods being replaced are sold at a higher profit margin ( which they typically are ) then the destroyed goods, wealth increases.
If the goods being replaced are more technologically advanced ( which they typically are ) then the destroyed goods, efficiency, and indirectly, wealth, increases.
If the goods being replaced require hiring more people ( which they typically do ) then the wealth of society increases with the larger tax base.
There's three scenarios I came up with in 34 seconds that destroy your entire statement.
Care to rescind?
Dan8267 says
Replacing destroyed goods does not increase the wealth of a society.
41   Onvacation   2017 Oct 14, 8:36pm  

PCGyver says
Why is it every thread turns into climate change?

Because the term global warming doesn't cover the snow, the fires, the storms, the droughts, and the wet bulb death of millions!
42   WookieMan   2017 Oct 15, 9:12am  

Dan8267 says

So if I break the windows in everyone's houses, the GDP goes up?

In this case I don't see why the GDP wouldn't go up. People had paid into the insurance premiums. Insurance companies held onto the money. And now they're paying it back in a way. So I don't see a negative there. Yes homes and material were lost, but the purchase of new materials and costs of labor put much more money back into the system then if there wasn't a hurricane/fire. If there were no disasters these insurance companies would just be sitting on piles of cash. As the money grows and grows, who do you think most of that money will go to? Those at the top. Now the money gets to go to carpenters, plumbers, roofer, electricians, etc who in turn buy things with this money, instead of it sitting with State Farm.
Dan8267 says
Replacing destroyed goods does not increase the wealth of a society. It does not even maintain the wealth of the society because of the Second Law of Thermodynamics. No, breaking a window and replacing it, burning a house and building a new one, getting cancer and curing it results in a net loss of wealth to society.

I'm not sure I follow. Are you saying that the burnt down material in the house is gone and cannot be replaced? Therefore it's a net loss? I guess I kind of get that if that's what you're saying. I mean we can grow more trees for the lumber, but probably not at a quick enough pace to keep up with the demand for lumber. So I suppose all those destroyed homes would be a negative in the regard to putting us further behind the replacement curve for trees. Or say plastics in the house that are destroyed, now have to be made again using products that are finite, oil. If that's what you're saying then I would tend to agree, but....

Every single day, everything is becoming more finite regardless of a hurricane or fire. Do these events speed the depletion of those resources, sure. The ultimate end game is death for most everybody (long time away) as these resources are depleted. The options to extend this deadline is population controls or find more resources elsewhere. There are likely other options, but these are the most impactful and likely in my opinion.

The first is probably the easiest and quickest solution to slow down the process, put limits on # of children. At least in the US, this won't happen in our lifetimes. Yet it's the single easiest way, if carbon is likely the cause of climate problems, to make life last longer on earth. I wouldn't do this or agree with this because the end game is still the same. The last dozen or so centuries before life is no longer sustainable on earth are likely not worth living in anyway. So moving the goalpost isn't all that great of a solution except for a select few, who would likely be the powerful anyway.

The second is the only true way to keep human life on earth surviving on a much longer timeline. I believe way more resources need to be put into the discovery and exploration of other planets and the potential resources that may exist on and within them. We as humans can survive temperature changes (not all will, many would die), but we can't survive without certain resources for very long or at least sustaining the current amount of people let alone as we add more people every day.

While the discussion and science around climate change is real, I've always held a pessimistic view of it. What's the point? If we don't control population or find resources elsewhere, the end game is all the same. It's very likely that much of the resources sunk into climate change are putting us on a faster path towards our demise. As we reduce our per capita output of carbon, we increase the population so it essentially stays at the same level due to population increases.

Electric cars, solar, nuclear, wind power, etc these are all awesome. I support them in the long run. But when we run out of fresh and clean water for the population, it doesn't matter. When the oil is gone, something will replace it. But it will likely be another finite resource. The game can only last so long as the population increases or we don't find additional resources to sustain.

Back to the hurricanes and fires. They really don't matter in the big picture in my opinion. They're just one pixel on a 4k screen. They're mathematically insignificant. This is a made up number, but as long as 10,000 people are being born every day and only 7,500 are dying, we going to run into a wall at some point. A couple hurricanes or fires in 2017 have no bearing on that, except that they reduce the population in bad disasters.

Dan8267 says
It's not magic. It's arithmetic.

And that's what I'm saying above. The math isn't looking good and it has nothing to do with climate change in my opinion. While I'm here, I might as well celebrate a quarter in which people will have more money in their pockets. Unfortunately it's due to a natural disaster that is difficult to definitively peg to climate change. Especially hurricanes and fires. Actually the fires are almost certainly directly tied to population increases and the search for usable land for residential homes that are in technically riskier areas. If there were subdivision there 100 years ago, they likely would have burned at one point too.
43   zzyzzx   2017 Oct 18, 8:36am  

Illegal alien started the fire:
http://www.breitbart.com/california/2017/10/17/ice-detainer-issued-for-suspected-wine-country-arsonist-in-sonoma-jail/

The U.S. Immigration & Customs Enforcement Agency (ICE) issued a detainer request on the Sonoma County Jail for Jesus Fabian Gonzalez, who was arrested Sunday on suspicion of arson in Wine Country fires that have killed at least 40 residents.
44   zzyzzx   2017 Oct 19, 11:49am  

ICE Director: Suspected Wine Country Arsonist Is Illegal Alien Mexican National

http://www.breitbart.com/california/2017/10/19/wine-country-ice-director-illegal-alien-charged-with-felony-sonoma-fire-twice-returned-to-mexico-sanctuary-state/
In other words, this fire is all Obama's fault!!!
45   joeyjojojunior   2017 Oct 19, 11:57am  

Dan8267 says
Replacing destroyed goods does not increase the wealth of a society. It does not even maintain the wealth of the society because of the Second Law of Thermodynamics. No, breaking a window and replacing it, burning a house and building a new one, getting cancer and curing it results in a net loss of wealth to society.

If such things actually increased wealth as Keynesians believe, then ANTIFA would be heroes. Just let those thugs burn down entire cities and the good times will roll. Why does common sense never get applied to economics. It's not magic. It's arithmetic.


It's no that simple in real life. Clearly breaking something in isolation doesn't increase wealth. But, in certain situations, where people are hoarding money causing an unvirtuous cycle of factories closing leading to less demand leading to more factories closing, etc--an event which forces people to spend their hoarded wealth can be an overall gain to the economy and country. The increased activity associated with higher velocity of money can be a huge gain where people are working again. An economy and a country with lower unemployment is stronger.

And that's what most people don't understand about Keynes. He didn't propose a one solution fits all panacea. He advocated a REDUCTION in spending during the good times. Politicians never do this, of course, but it's certainly not Keynes' fault.
46   zzyzzx   2019 Jan 8, 11:55am  

Take the bankruptcy path and give California exactly what it's asking for, poorer service and higher prices.

Don't worry, Governor Newsom will 'nationalize' PG&E so the State can ration energy to its residents to fight climate change.

Here's what the bleeding heart liberals in California deserve. The state should come in and take over PG&E and use taxpayer dollars to run it. Then they should go in and take over all the gas stations, (they might as well since taxes make up the bulk of the price/gal) Then the grocery/liquor stores etc etc. Once they control all that, they'll have to offer free healthcare and college to stem the masses from fleeing the state. California will be an experiment of what it's like to live in a place where everything is owned and operated by the state (aka socialism) Isn't that exactly what the liberals living there want?
48   zzyzzx   2019 Jan 14, 9:10am  

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/pg-e-bailout-hopes-crushed-163848465.html

PG&E Bailout Hopes Are Crushed With California Showing Little Interest

Now that PG&E Corp. has said it plans to file for bankruptcy, analysts are seeing little chance that California lawmakers will step in anytime soon with a bailout for the beleaguered power provider.

California’s largest utility, which faces potential liabilities of $30 billion or more from deadly wildfires, said it will file under Chapter 11 of the U.S. bankruptcy code by Jan. 29, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing Monday. Governor Gavin Newsom issued a statement signaling he’s willing to let PG&E proceed, saying that at the same time “the company should continue to honor promises made to energy suppliers and to our community.”

A bankruptcy reorganization would, in fact, allow PG&E to operate and keep the lights on. What’s more, it “diversifies the responsibility for what plays out,” said Kit Konolige, a senior analyst with Bloomberg Intelligence. He said he didn’t believe there was much enthusiasm in Sacramento for an immediate rescue plan. “What politician is going to step up and say ‘I want to save PG&E?’ ’’

There are some, including Democratic Assemblyman Chris Holden, who in a statement called a bankruptcy “deeply concerning for the state.”

The pressure is unlikely to be off politicians to eventually act. Newsom covered that ground in his statement: “I will be working with the legislature and all stakeholders on a solution that ensures consumers have access to safe, affordable and reliable service, fire victims are treated fairly, and California can continue to make progress toward our climate goals.”

PG&E employs 20,000 and provides power to more than 15 million people. Its liabilities could grow from wildfires in 2017 and 2018; the state Department of Forestry and Fire Protection has blamed 17 of the 2017 blazes in part on company power lines and other equipment.

Its stock has tanked, and it has little left in the bank -- $1.5 billion in cash and cash equivalents as of Friday. PG&E has said it doesn’t intend to make an interest payment of about $21.6 million due Tuesday on 5.4 percent senior notes due in 2040.

“There isn’t a lot of time left. You’re talking six months until you actually get into a liquidity crunch,” said Guggenheim analyst Shahriar Pourreza.

Even if they wanted to, Newsom and legislators might simply be unable to do anything in time.

“The high degree of controversy and public outcry stemming from wildfire damages and perceived blame assigned to PG&E likely creates headwinds in the legislative process,” the research firm ClearView Energy Partners LLC said in a report Monday. “The 15-day notice offers a very short runway for lawmakers to act.”

PG&E on Sunday started searching for a new chief executive officer after Geisha Williams, 57, quit; General counsel John Simon will take the helm in the meantime.

Williams’s departure came after a catastrophic period for PG&E. Bonds that traded above face value about months ago now fetch around 85 cents on the dollar. The stock fell as much as 50 percent to $8.77 a share as of 11:10 a.m. in New York, its biggest intraday drop ever. Shares are down 82 percent since the Camp fire broke out Nov. 8.

PG&E Corporation (PCG) $9.11/sh -8.48 (-48.20%)
49   zzyzzx   2019 Jan 15, 11:35am  

PG&E Corporation (PCG) $6.59/sh -1.79 (-21.36%)
50   anonymous   2019 Jan 31, 9:52pm  

PG&E Stock Is Going to Zero, Hedge Fund Says

Shares of bankrupt California utility PG&E (PCG) have been going up, but this investor says it’s based on false hope.

George Schultze, founder of distressed investor Schultze Asset Management, which has about $200 million under management, says he has already profited from shorting the shares of the utility that filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Tuesday.

That would make sense: PG&E’s shares are down 40% this year, and have dropped nearly 70% since the wildfires began. And shareholders get paid back last in bankruptcy, behind bondholders, lawyers, and in this case, wildfire victims. But PG&E’s stock surged after the filing, based on what Schultze says is a misguided bet on a bailout. (The shares down 4% on Thursday.)

“99.75% of the time, shareholders get nothing when a company goes bankrupt,” Schultze tells Barron’s at the Context Summits Miami conference. “But there’s false hope that won’t be the case this time. A key part of that speculation is you have to assume the California legislature and California Public Utility Commission will bail you out. And here there is such aversion to that kind of deal.”

The destruction wrought by the recent Camp Fire is too great, and too political -- 86 people died, thousands of acres scorched, thousands of structures destroyed. “So, politically it’s much more challenging than most cases to grant any recovery at all to shareholders,” he says.

Of the stock, “our thesis is that it’ll go to zero,” he says.

https://www.barrons.com/articles/why-a-short-selling-hedge-fund-says-pg-e-stock-is-going-to-zero-51548962268?mod=hp_DAY_4

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