Biden calls Colorado's most destructive wildfire 'code red' climate
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[January 08, 2022]
By Jeff Mason
LOUISVILLE, Colo. (Reuters) -U.S. President
Joe Biden, visiting the scene of Colorado's most destructive wildfire on
record, said on Friday the rare winter blaze marked the latest "code
red" reminder of an ominously changing climate he hopes to confront with
his renewable energy agenda.
"We can't ignore the reality that these fires are being supercharged" by
global warming, Biden said after touring a neighborhood in the
Denver-area town of Louisville reduced to ruins by last week's
devastating Marshall Fire.
Two people were missing and feared dead after the wind-driven,
prairie-grass fire incinerated more than 1,000 dwellings on Dec. 30-31,
making it the most destructive Colorado blaze on record in terms of
property losses.
The fire in Boulder County, on the northern outskirts of the Denver
metropolitan area, charred 6,000 acres and laid waste to parts of
Louisville and the adjacent town of Superior. Fanned by gale-force
winds, the flames at times devoured football field-size stretches of
drought-parched landscape in seconds.
Biden's trip to Boulder County marked his second as president to
Colorado and his second focused on wildfires.
Under bright sunny skies, the president and first lady Jill Biden walked
through a flame-ravaged Louisville neighborhood where blackened rubble
and scorched tree trunks poked through a blanket of snow. They chatted
briefly with emergency workers and families displaced by the blaze.
The president, pausing to embrace some residents and place a hand on the
shoulders of others, was joined on the tour by Colorado Governor Jared
Polis and three members of the state's congressional delegation.
"We lost everything," one man said. Biden gave him a hug.
Addressing first-responders and members of the community at a nearby
recreation center later, Biden said he was as moved by the scope of
devastation he saw as he was by "the incredible courage and resolve that
you all show."
"We're going to make sure that everything you need occurs," Biden told
the crowd.
He noted the blaze was the latest in a string of highly destructive
wildfires in Colorado and elsewhere in the West that experts say are
symptomatic of extreme drought and rising temperatures associated with
climate change.
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President Joe Biden receives an economic briefing in the Roosevelt
Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., March 5, 2021.
REUTERS/Tom Brenner
"The situation is a blinking code
red for our nation," he Biden said.
Biden also used the occasion to make a pitch for his chief
legislative initiative, the Build Back Better Act, which would
funnel billions of dollars to enhanced forest management,
firefighting and efforts to reduce carbon emissions.
The bill, opposed by Republicans, passed the Democratic-controlled
House of Representatives in November. It must still clear the
Senate, where it has yet to secure the needed support of all of
Biden's fellow Democrats.
While acknowledging such measures offer no immediate solace to
survivors of last week's fire, he said greater investments in
renewable energy would spur major job growth while addressing the
looming threat of more climate-related calamities.
Biden has declared the latest fire zone on the eastern fringe of the
Rocky Mountains a national disaster, freeing up federal funds to
assist residents and businesses in recovery efforts.
The normal wildfire season in Colorado does not typically extend
into the winter thanks to snow cover and bracing cold. But climate
change and rising global temperatures are leaving vegetation in
parts of the western United States drier and more incendiary.
Insured losses from the fire are expected to run about $1 billion,
according to catastrophe modeling firm Karen Clark & Company.
Local authorities put the value of residential property damage alone
at more than $500 million.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason in Denver; Additional reporting by Trevor
Hunnicutt in Washington and Keith Coffman in Denver; Writing by
Steve Gorman; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Leslie Adler)
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