Column: In a strikingly ignorant tweet, Trump gets almost everything about California wildfires wrong
No one would mistake President Trump for an expert on climate change or water policy, but a tweet he issued late Sunday about Californiaâs wildfires deserves some sort of award for most glaring misstatements about those two issues in the smallest number of words.
Trump blamed the fires on âbad environmental laws which arenât allowing massive amount of readily available water to be properly utilized.â He complained that water needed for firefighting is being âdiverted into the Pacific Ocean.â
What he overlooked, plainly, is the increasing agreement among experts that intensifying climate change has contributed to the intensity of the wildfire season. Californiaâs woodlands have been getting drier and hotter. As my colleagues Rong-Gong Lin II and Javier Panzar reported over the weekend, âCalifornia has been getting hotter for some time, but July was in a league of its own.â
The idea that there isnât enough water is the craziest thing in the world.
— Peter Gleick, Pacific Institute
The current wildfires, which have killed nine people and consumed nearly 400,000 acres of woodland, destroyed 1,100 homes and forced the evacuation of thousands of residents, are among the worst in the stateâs history. Theyâre unrelated to water supplies or environmental laws.
Letâs take Trumpâs misconceptions in order. The likeliest explanation for his take on water is that heâs confused by the demands for more irrigation water heâs hearing from Republican officeholders in the Central Valley. Theyâre the people who grouse about water being âwastedâ by being diverted to the ocean, rather than into their fields.
Their demands have nothing to do with the availability of water for firefighting. Fire agencies havenât been complaining about a lack of water, especially water âdivertedâ to the Pacific. Major reservoirs are near the worst fire zones; the Carr fire is near Lake Shasta and Whiskeytown Lake and the Mendocino Complex fire is near Clear Lake. All are at or near their historical levels.
âThere have been no issues getting water from them,â Scott McLean, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or Cal Fire, told me.
Cal Fire, which is managing the wildfire battle, has deployed some 200 water tenders to the fire zone and is dispatching air tankers as flying conditions permit.
âThe idea that there isnât enough water is the craziest thing in the world,â says Peter Gleick, president emeritus of the Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment, and Security in Oakland. âThereâs absolutely no shortage.â
The availability of water isnât necessarily a governing factor in fighting wildfires, which arenât battled like tenement blazes in the urban center. The battle is dictated by topography, the construction of physical fire breaks, and the use of fire retardant dropped from airborne vessels.
The valley growersâ stepped-up complaints about water diversions have gotten the Trump administrationâs attention. Among those leading the charge is Rep. Jeff Denham, R-Turlock, who has been peppering constituents in the Central Valley with promises to fight for âour water.â Thatâs irrigation supply diverted from the San Joaquin-San Francisco Bay Delta. Denham hosted a visit to the area last week by Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, whose agency has obligingly attacked state water policies.
Denham and his Central Valley colleagues are especially exercised about a plan announced last month by the California State Water Resources Control Board to step up water flows into the San Joaquin River, which eventually empties into the Pacific. The board is taking that step because so much water has been pumped into the valley at the expense of the river ecosystem that the stateâs salmon fishery has been all but destroyed. Denham, who calls the plan a âwater grab,â has introduced legislation in Washington to block it. As Gleick points out, water in Northern California flows to the ocean naturally â itâs the irrigation and urban users who have âdivertedâ it.
As for the âbad environmental laws,â itâs unclear whether Trump means California laws or federal laws. Trump may be referring to state and federal laws that place water allocations to protect fish and wildlife on equal standing with irrigation and urban user supplies. Whatever his targets, they donât prevent âreadily available waterâ to be utilized to fight fires.
Or he may be referring to state and federal laws aimed at controlling emissions of greenhouse gases or protecting endangered species. Both categories are under attack from his administration.
Itâs proper to note that the environmental policies being promoted by the Trump White House will make climate change worse. Trump withdrew the United States from the 2015 Paris agreement on climate change. Heâs proposing to eviscerate government standards on fuel economy, which would mean more emissions of greenhouse gases, and proposing to revoke a waiver allowing California to set its own, tougher standards.
Trump has called climate change science a âcon job,â a âmythâ and a âhoax,â so itâs unsurprising that he would be utterly insensitive to the connection between climate change and heat-driven wildfires.
The sole nugget of fact in Trumpâs tweet may be found in its final line, which states, âMust also tree clear to stop fire spreading!â This isnât exactly placed in cogent or coherent thought, so itâs possible itâs a truth nugget of the blind squirrel variety.
If Trump means âtree clearâ to mean more logging, then heâs merely putting his oar in for more commercial exploitation of the forests. If he means the construction of fire breaks to contain fires, thatâs correct but itâs a well understood technique and is exactly the technique being applied as a matter of course.
If Trump means better forest management by consistent clearing of the underbrush that becomes tinder for wildfires, thatâs true â but itâs not a novel concept. The suppression of smaller fires over the decades, in part to protect residences that have encroached into woodland, has increased the opportunities for bigger fires to take hold.
But those policies fall within the jurisdiction of the federal government, as well as the state, since national forests and their environs are where much of the encroachment â the so-called wildland-urban interface â has taken place. Among other factors, federal spending on fire suppression in the national forests has effectively subsidized the expansion of the interface, by taking the costs of fire control off the shoulders of the residents.
But if Trump intends to address this factor, thereâs no sign of it in any government policy statement. Its absence tells the story behind Trumpâs fire tweet: He has no idea whatâs causing the wildfires this season, no conception of how to fight them and no plan in place to alter the trend of more fires or more severity. Doing so means devoting attention to a complex problem that involves science, nature and government action. That canât be accomplished via a Sunday night tweet.
Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page, or email [email protected].
Return to Michael Hiltzikâs blog.