In just a single month, 2025 is the second most destructive fire year in California history, with more than 16,000 homes and other structures damaged or destroyed by two fires in the Los Angeles area.
Climate change is an intensifier — a force that amplifies and worsens existing conditions. It increases the probability that extreme conditions will compound and become unprecedented.
The LA County Sheriff’s Department is commending two deputies for their heroic efforts to save multiple senior citizens from the Eaton fire.
As Los Angeles recovers from its devastating wildfires, environmental engineers, urban planners and natural disaster experts ...
Nearly two weeks after the Eaton fire forced Claire Robinson to flee her Altadena home, she returned, donning a white hazmat ...
Victor Joseph, president of Mercury Insurance, says there are lessons to be learned for L.A. from the rebuilding of Paradise following its destruction in the 2018 Camp fire.
The effect of the California wildfires will continue to play out across the debt markets long after the last of the flames ...
Legal experts suggest the nation’s largest municipal utility will face paying damages to homeowners after fire crews were ...
A new attribution analysis found that climate heating caused by burning fossil fuels significantly increased the likelihood ...
As the cleanup phase of recovery begins after the devastating fires in L.A. County, displaced residents grapple with new ...
Jan. 22, 10:30 a.m. PST Cal Fire data marked the Palisades Fire at 68% containment and the Eaton Fire at 91% containment, ...
Twenty-eight people have died across the Los Angeles area. Officials have said the true death toll isn’t known as the fires ...