
Utah declares emergency as largest US wildfire forces evacuations; Colombia confronts illegal burns
Extreme fire weather across the western United States has driven the Cottonwood Fire to nearly 290 square kilometres, while Colombian authorities report intercepting an illegal charcoal burn every five days ahead of El Niño.
Mandatory evacuations were ordered and a state of emergency declared in southern Utah on Friday after the Cottonwood Fire, the largest active wildfire in the United States, severely damaged the Eagle Point ski resort in Beaver County and threatened several rural communities. According to state forestry officials, the blaze had burned unchecked across more than 290 square kilometres since igniting on Monday, with strong winds grounding air support and driving flames through the forest canopy. Roughly 1,300 residents of Marysvale, Junction and Circleville were told to be ready to leave, while two families confirmed to local media that their cabins had been destroyed.
Authorities in Salt Lake City described conditions as historically extreme. The National Weather Service issued its first-ever “Particularly Dangerous Situation” warning for five Utah counties, a category normally reserved for tornado outbreaks, and red flag warnings stretched from Idaho to New Mexico. Meteorologists recorded sustained winds of 56 kilometres per hour and gusts reaching 72 kilometres per hour, with humidity in the single digits. State forester Jamie Barnes said fires were spreading “farther and faster under conditions that defy historical expectations.” The governor’s emergency order restricted fireworks through 5 July, noting that more than 75 percent of Utah’s wildfires this year have been human-caused, though the specific origin of the Cottonwood Fire remains unknown.
Viewed from Bogotá, a parallel pattern of human-ignited fire risk is unfolding. The regional environmental authority for Cundinamarca reports that it has conducted 27 operations so far this year to halt illegal open-air burning for charcoal production, an average of one intervention every five days. The clandestine burns, which use scrap wood, furniture parts and other waste, are concentrated in Nemocón and the border municipality of Ráquira, releasing toxic emissions and, officials warn, creating a severe ignition threat as the El Niño dry season approaches. Last year, such practices accounted for 73 percent of the corporation’s environmental emergencies. In response, the governor of Cundinamarca convened a multi-departmental climate change council with Boyacá, Tolima, Huila and Bogotá to coordinate water security and fire contingency plans.
As of Friday evening, the Cottonwood Fire remained zero percent contained, and power utilities across central and southern Utah had issued public safety shutoff warnings. The National Interagency Fire Center said nearly 1.2 million hectares have burned nationwide since January, pushing the United States above the ten-year average. In Colombia, environmental prosecutors said they would maintain strict controls on the capital’s periphery, while regional planners continued to cross-reference emissions data and rural technical assistance gaps. No fatalities have been reported in either country, and investigations into the cause of the Cottonwood Fire are ongoing.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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Across the western United States, extreme heat, drought, and wind are fueling massive wildfires. Utah's governor has declared a state of emergency and banned fireworks ahead of July Fourth celebrations as the Cottonwood Fire expands rapidly. Authorities warn that the combination of dry vegetation and high winds creates exceptionally dangerous conditions.
In Colombia, the department of Cundinamarca is leading a regional effort to prepare for the El Niño phenomenon and protect strategic ecosystems. Meanwhile, environmental authorities are stepping up operations against illegal open-air charcoal production, which frequently triggers wildfires and degrades air quality in the Bogotá savanna.
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