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"In the case of the Eaton Fire near Altadena, there's 317 grid faults that occurred in the hours preceding the ignition," Marshall said. "And then in the Hurst Fire, there's about 230 faults that occurred that we measured on the sensor network."
Sparks from faults can fall to the ground and ignite vegetation, essentially setting a match on the landscape. High winds then carry the flames at rapid speeds.
originally posted by: xuenchen
Yup, the Santa Ana Winds are known to be a problem with electric wire polls. You'd think the experts and officials would have done something over the decades and decades and decades of the same problems happening over and over and over again and again. 🥶️
The Los Angeles Times reported that despite the reservoir’s critical role in the city’s water infrastructure, it had been offline for nearly a year.
The Santa Ynez Reservoir, with a capacity of 117 million gallons, could have played a critical role in providing water pressure to firefighters battling the devastating fire that destroyed thousands of homes and buildings in Los Angeles, Santa Monica, and Malibu
DWP Chief Executive Janisse Quiñones acknowledged that the system struggled to maintain water pressure amid unprecedented demand. While officials cited the “intensity” of the fire as a complicating factor, they also admitted that the offline reservoir contributed to diminished pressure in key areas.