Thursday, September 6, 2018

California's 2018 wildfire costs so far: $845 million

a tree in front of a sunset: Firefighters battle a Carr fire flare-up near Buckhorn Summit, Calif., on Highway 299 on Monday, July 30, 2018.  Firefighters battle a Carr fire flare-up near Buckhorn Summit, Calif., on Highway 299 on Monday, July 30, 2018.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - The two giant wildfires that ravaged Northern California this summer caused at least $845 million in property damage, the state announced Thursday.
Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones, who released the figures, said the costs are likely to climb "as insurance companies process claims and more claims are filed."
The figures reflect the property damage from the Carr fire, which destroyed entire neighborhoods in western Redding, and the Mendocino Complex fire in Mendocino and Lake counties. The Mendocino Complex, which is 98 percent contained, is the largest fire in the state's history in sheer size, at 459,123 acres. The Carr fire, which chewed through 229,651 acres, is the seventh-largest California wildfire.
The bulk of the property damage occurred in the Carr fire, where losses total $788 million.
Jones released the data as another dangerous fire flared up in Northern California. The Delta Fire in Shasta County was at 15,294 acres Thursday and caused the shutdown of a stretch of I-5 north of Redding. The commissioner noted that California's fire season traditionally peaks in September and October.
"The worst may well yet be to come, based on past history," Jones said at a news conference in San Francisco. "The next couple of months, we could see additional fires with catastrophic losses."
At the same time, the loss figures released Thursday are a fraction of the damage sustained in 2017's fire season. Jones put those totals at $12.8 billion. Last October's wine country fires, which killed 44 people and destroyed more than 5,500 homes, caused more than $9 billion in damage alone.
Visit The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif.) at www.sacbee.com

No comments: