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Before Los Angeles disaster, firefighters took others out of California


Getty Images Woman shoots a suitcase in the car parked in La Street while it burnsGetty Images

More than 150,000 people were forced to evacuate for the last fires of LA

When Christina Welch still seemed to heaven, Santa Rosa, 2 km from California (3.2 km) was the day.

It was the fire of Hambien 2017, at the time the most destructive history in California. He woke the neighbors in Welch in the morning and told him to catch his things and get out. When Mrs. Welch opened the door, the ashes were falling from the sky and smoke filled the air.

Then, in 2019, Kincade Wildfire forced parents to evacuate for five days.

Ms Welch was the last push. After a friend’s advice, he packed things and went through the country to his new hometown: Duluth, Minnesota.

“It was just the end of all,” the 42-year-old said. “If I hadn’t worryed I wouldn’t worry, if I lost a house I would go to every falling fall.”

Welch is one of several people who have left California in recent years, due to climate disasters, the most destructive firefighters in Los Angeles’s history are killed 25 people this month.

This week, the wild wildfire and the fastest wildfire exploded in the northwest of the city, forcing ten thousand people to evacuate a region based on destruction. Trump intends to visit Southern California on Friday, he witnessed the destruction.

Climate experts say so far, they do not see the massive migration of the state as a result of climate change, and it is difficult to calculate the number of people who have left for this reason. However, the growth rate of the state population, however, has continued to decrease since 2000, according to the US census.

Scientists and demographics say that the disasters of climate change are said to be more extreme and unpredictable, the number of people who have left the state has been able to lift, leaving unprepared cities with the role of new neighbors.

“This wave of new people could say: smoke,” said Michigan University Data Science Description Derek Van Berkel.

“We need to start preparing for these events because they will be more often and more extreme.”

Leaving California “Klima Havens”

Getty Images Christina Welch wears a green sweater, standing near Deluth's waterGetty Images

He moved to Christina Welch Duluth for a few years, and his family evacuated from the multiple California firefighters

Some climate-related factors can push Californians to leave home outside the next decade. From 2020 to 2023, Firefighters destroyed more than 15,000 structures in California, depending on the jacket. At least 12,000 structures have been lost in early this year in Los Angeles firefighters.

The state also deals with other impacts on climate change, including floods. The rise of sea level could have a population of about half a million-year-old in areas of 2100, according to the Office of the State Lawyers.

The state also deals with an average earthquake on average, 5.5 or higher each year, according to the California Conservation Department.

As climate disasters have been more extreme and more frequent, the state housing insurance rates have also continued to rise. More than 100,000 inhabitants of California have lost home insurance since 2019, according to a Chronicle Chronicle of San Francisco.

LA Fire: How did the Day of destruction spread

The data suggests that the climate migration is a local phenomenon, which moves through the interior state, who seek greater soil in their city, Jeremy Porter, the head of climate implications, makes climate risk modeling.

But, he said, that the smaller number of people has begun a smaller number of people in recent years that they predict as a “climate paradise” that go to City of California.

Several urban and media reports – After the climate adaptation research, Jesse Keenan created a list of 2019 in 2019, expected to be a lower risk for extreme climate events, which is called “receiving zones”.

At the top of the list is Duluth, Minnesota, an former industrial city, about 90,000 people, the population grew slowly since 2020.

One of the draws of the people is the closeness between the great lakes, the lakes of the world’s largest freshwater body. About 10% of the US and 30% of Canada are based on lakes in search of drinking water.

“In a scenario that has become scarce, it is a huge asset,” Van Berkel said.

Large lakes attracted large water supply Jamie Beck Alexander and his family attracted to Duluth. In California, Alexander, his husband and two young children are regularly accumulated in his husband and two young children Camper in a van and went to Minnesota in 2020.

Mrs. Alexander has found similarities between small and progressive cities and the old city of San Francisco.

“It’s a deep connection between people, and deep root, I think the things I think is important for climate resilience,” he said.

Welchs ignored his friend, who believed to be known for his record snow conditions and freezing conditions, on average of 106 days for subcontracting temperatures. A nice city in a mountain, he has become himself, he said.

“There are many people who live in the place where they love and want to protect,” Welch said Duluth said.

LA SULTROF DAY: FERNO Skies and loaded housing

Preparing for climate migration

Although some cities embraced the designation as a climate paradise, it remains challenging to find resources to plan new residents and climate resilience for local local governments, Van Berkel said.

Mr Van Berkel works with Duluth and other cities in the large lakes on climate change, well-welcome to new neighbors moving as a result of climate change.

The city of Duluth has declined by BBC to respond to the comment that was preparing climate-migrants potentially welcome.

For now, Mr. Porter said: Great lakes and other “Klima-Haven” cities do not see high migration levels. But if that changed, a lot would not be ready, he said.

“It would take a great investment in local communities … To take a kind of population indicated by a climate migration literature,” Mr. Porter said.

In the city of Duluth, for example, there may be a problem availability of housing, Mrs. Alexander said. He said the city despite the space to create new housing, it doesn’t currently have enough new developments for the growing population. As a result, over the years, he said, housing prices have risen.

And any new home and other new developments should be considered with climate change, Van Berkel said.

“We don’t want to make mistakes that may be very expensive with our infrastructure when we grow the ugly head of climate change,” he said.

Are the ‘Climate Paradisu’ myth?

In 2024, 4 hurricane hurricanes destroyed more than 2,000 homes and business Carolina, North Carolina in Kelsey Lahr, North Carolina.

2020. He moved to the warm climate of the city, restaurant and music stage after Santa Barbara, next to the City of California, after many destructive firefighters and soils.

Before moving, Mrs. Lahr was the most climate living ways, Asheville places the top of the temperature and internal locations, which protects the floods.

But last year, he landed in northern Carolina in Helene Hurricane, killed more than 100 people in the state and killed the new birthplace of Asheville. Many left without power for almost 20 days and without potential drinking water for a month.

“It is clear that the Southern Appalachia is not built” Klima Haven, “Mrs. Lahr said.

Kelsey Lahr Kelsey Lahr carries a baseball cap in Asheville, North CarolinaKelsey Lahr

Asheville feels safer from wild lady and climate disasters in the New North Carolina house

In Deluth, Mrs. Alexander said his family also learned that he could escape from climate change quickly.

In the first summer, they flew from California with smoke and poor air quality.

“How was it, it’s very good he played the universe,” he said. “We will always feel the cause of the root (unless facilitating climate change), we must receive and move.”

Since then he has gone to Wisconsin for personal reasons, but he does not regret the first route to Minnesota. He doesn’t regret Mrs. Lahr to go to Asheville.

Mrs. Lahr Yosemite loses the ancient forests of the National Park around the California National Park, where he worked as his summer Park Ranger, needs sacrifices for the future that can lead to more climate catastrophes.

“I’m thinking that climate paradise is myth,” he said. “Everyone must be living and the risk they go from there.”

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