
Fifty firefighters tackling West Lothian wild blaze
Fire crews are continuing to battle a wild blaze in a wooded area in West Lothian.The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service (SFRS) said up to 50 firefighters are still attending the scene, almost 24 hours after they were called to the site near Fauldhouse.The fire was said to cover 40,000 sq metres, the equivalent to about five-and-a-half football pitches.An extreme risk warning for wildfires is currently in place across mainland Scotland.
The service received the first call at 11:43 on Saturday and eight appliances attended the scene.Earlier the SFRS said dry, warm weather was increasing the chance of fires breaking out.
The service has asked people to be very careful with naked flames in the countryside.Meanwhile, the latest Scottish Environment Protection Agency (Sepa) report shows that a lack of rain is causing water levels to fall in many rivers across the country.Water scarcity is reported across Dumfries and Galloway and the Scottish Borders, up through the Firth of Forth and Firth of Tay to all parts of Aberdeenshire.Sepa said rivers around the Black Isle and Thurso were also affected.The wildfire warning runs until Monday.People are being asked to think of the consequences that fires sparked by cigarettes or barbeques can have on wildlife, agriculture and rural communities.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
18 hours ago
- BBC News
UK weather: temperatures set to hit 29C this week with thunderstorms likely
Heat is set to build across the UK this week with temperatures expected to reach 29C (84F) in some areas by Friday.A feed of southerly winds will bring warm air from north Africa and south-west Europe across the country accompanied by increasing will be some sunny spells but also the chance of some heavy downpours and thunderstorms which could bring a lot of rain in a short space of comes after the warmest and sunniest spring on record was followed by an unsettled start to meteorological summer. How warm will it get? Temperatures will start to climb on Tuesday but the really warm air will set in by of Scotland and Northern Ireland will reach 18-21C (64-70F), with 21-25C (70-77F) expected across England and air will be turning increasingly humid, with a rather muggy and sticky places will be dry on Wednesday but during the afternoon and evening scattered showers and thunderstorms will start to develop in western parts of the UK. The very warm and humid air will remain on Thursday but thunderstorms will become more widespread - which may suppress temperatures a heavy downpours are possible, which could merge into longer spells of looks likely to bring the peak of the heat with highs currently forecast to reach 27-29C (81-84F) in eastern England - with a mix of sunny spells and computer weather models suggest a low chance of reaching 30C (86F) if there is enough sunshine. The nights will also be warm and humid which could make it a little tricky for sleeping. Will it be a heatwave? At the moment it does not look like this will meet the official definition of a heatwave - three consecutive days above a threshold that varies from 25-28C (77-82F) in different parts of the it may well feel like one, especially given the temperatures will be well above the seasonal average of 16-20C (61-70F) but are unlikely to threaten the UK's June temperature record of 35.6C (96.1F) set at Camden Square in London on 29 June 1957. Orange sunrises and sunsets Keep an eye out for some impressive skies over the coming week has started with some vivid orange sunrises and sunsets due to wildfire smoke that has travelled across the Atlantic from Canada, high in the atmosphere. Later this week the southerly winds bringing warm air from north Africa are also expected to transport dust from the Sahara across our could lead to further beautiful morning and evening skyscapes - especially when combined with layers of you capture any impressive sunrise or sunset photos, please send them to us at BBC Weather Watchers. Will it turn hotter later in June? This week's warmth and humidity is likely to give way to something fresher over the weekend - although temperatures are likely to remain around or above the June that there is a lot of uncertainty in computer weather are suggesting the possibility of another surge of heat towards the end of the month, whereas others allow for cooler and more unsettled weather, especially in northern is far too soon to predict the details of any heatwave that might head our way later this month - or deeper into the long-range forecasts do suggest a greater-than-normal chance of hot weather for the season can always keep up to date with the changes in your local forecast with BBC Weather online and on the BBC Weather app.


Reuters
a day ago
- Reuters
Los Angeles wildfires were 10 times bigger than utility's AI forecast
June 9 (Reuters) - Southern California Edison's internal wildfire forecasts underestimated the potential size of the Eaton Canyon fire in Los Angeles by a factor of ten in the days leading up to a deadly conflagration in January, according to documents reviewed by Reuters. The miss suggests potential weaknesses in the utility's fire modeling capabilities that factored into its response to the January wildfire threats, despite being upgraded with improved computing, datasets and artificial intelligence. At the time, wildfires whipsawed through Los Angeles' western flank near Santa Monica and Eaton Canyon in the east as they consumed more than 34,000 acres (13,750 hectares) - or some 53 square miles - turning entire neighborhoods to ash. Although no official cause for the Eaton Canyon blaze has been released, numerous lawsuits have claimed SCE's decision to keep power flowing to some lines and towers in the Altadena area led to the circumstances that triggered it. SCE has said the cause and circumstances around the fire are under investigation and will be for some time, and defended its modeling capabilities. "We are confident with our fire spread modeling and weather forecasting," Raymond Fugere, SCE's asset intelligence director, told Reuters in an interview. Fugere said SCE's simulations could have shown higher estimates for acres burned in hard-hit areas. Variations in wind patterns and available fuels in hard-hit areas may not have been fully accounted for in the fire spread modeling, he said. "But overall, we do feel confident with our modeling because it is giving us very actionable information to be able to make decisions," he said. SCE's simulations predicted a Jan. 7 ignition in Eaton Canyon that could scorch about 1,000 acres within eight hours without fire suppression, according to an SCE fire potential forecast obtained by Reuters through a public records request. SCE told Reuters those fire spread simulations were factored into the utility's power shutoff decisions as strong seasonal winds and dry conditions escalated the looming wildfire threat. The Eaton fire ignited as forecast on Jan. 7, but ultimately consumed some 14,000 acres, destroying around 9,400 homes and buildings, and killing 17 civilians – making it the centerpiece of one of the costliest natural disasters in U.S. history. Joseph Mitchell, a scientist and wildfire expert witness for California utility regulators, said SCE's predictions missed the mark mainly because its models were only running simulations that extend eight hours after an ignition. The bulk of the Eaton fire's damage happened well after the eight-hour mark. Michael Wara, a wildfire policy expert at Stanford Law School, said the wildfire modeling may also have erred because it is better tuned to simulating fire in dense shrubs and woodlands, instead of blocks of homes and businesses. "Altadena was a wildland fire for about 20 minutes, and then it became an urban conflagration ... where houses are burning houses down, and where gardens are the fuel type not ... mixed conifer forests," Wara said. SCE, a unit of Edison International (EIX.N), opens new tab, acknowledged it is evaluating changes to its wildfire risk models, including whether to use 24-hour fire spread simulations in the future. "The January 2025 wildfires raise important questions regarding the spread of wildfires into built urban environments," the company said in a May 16 filing with regulators. SCE has previously acknowledged that 24-hour simulations might capture more extreme events where firefighting resources are limited, according to regulatory filings with the California Public Utilities Commission prior to the fires. But SCE's Fugere said the longer simulations produce more uncertainty. SCE's forecast was the biggest test yet of upgraded forecasting capabilities since California Governor Gavin Newsom launched the "Wildfire Innovation Sprint" in 2019 – an initiative to encourage the use of AI to predict disasters and safeguard lives and property. Since then, SCE has built four supercomputer clusters capable of generating 13 billion simulations across 400 weather scenarios and 29 million ignition points, according to regulatory filings. The company also began using the services of Technosylva, a La Jolla, California-based company, which received $383,000 in state funding in 2019 to develop forecasting tools for utilities and emergency responders. Technosylva Chief Executive Bryan Spear told Reuters his company's risk models captured the magnitude of the Los Angeles wildfire five days in advance, allowing firefighters to make better preparations for the looming catastrophe. SCE's equipment has not been blamed for starting the massive Palisades fire, but the utility's forecast also vastly underestimated its potential size. The separate blaze started on the same day as the Eaton Canyon fire. SCE's forecast projected up to 1,000 acres burned in the Pacific Palisades area, according to the document. Actual wildfire destruction there included 23,448 acres burned, 12 civilian deaths and nearly 7,000 structures destroyed, according to Cal Fire. Together the Eaton and Palisades fires destroyed more than 16,000 structures and caused most of the $250 billion in economic losses estimated by AccuWeather. SCE plans to spend another $8 million on upgrading fire science and modeling this year, up from $2 million in 2018, company disclosures show.


The Independent
a day ago
- The Independent
UK weather: Thunderstorms to accompany rise in temperatures as warm-air plume drifts over from France
Temperatures are expected to soar across Britain this week with a chance of thunderstorms after a cooler start to June than expected. The Met Office has forecasted peaks of 25C on Friday this week in southeast England as temperatures gradually increase across the country. Newcastle will see balmy 22C heat while York experiences 23C of warmth. Temperatures in Scotland will rise to 21C on towards the end of the week in Berwick-Upon-Tweed, while the rest of the nation will experience warmth averaging in the late teens and early twenties. The remaining drizzle from last week is expected to gradually clear over the week as the climate begins to feel warmer and more humid, particularly in the South. Rainy spells in the North will gradually clear on Tuesday for bright skies, but thundery showers are expected to move northwards during Thursday and Friday. The Met Office said 'temperatures are on the rise' as the weather is set to remain 'changeable' over the next few days. Meteorologist Craig Snell said that a plume of warm air from Iberia and France brought along the chance of thunderstorms with its humidity. He added: 'After Wednesday, we start to draw up some very warm and humid air from Iberia and France, and that will make it quite humid across much of the UK and that humidity will potentially spark off some thunderstorms. 'From late Wednesday and especially into Thursday, we start to see the risk of some thunderstorms around and that will continue as we go through Thursday and Friday and potentially into Saturday as well. 'By the time we get to midweek, it will feel very different out there, with quite humid night times also becoming a good deal warmer than what we have been experiencing over the last couple of nights, so probably borderline uncomfortable for some people by day.' The humid weather follows on from the UK's warmest spring on record, and the driest in more than 50 years, according to provisional Met Office figures. Provisional figures showed this spring's average temperature of 9.5C was above the long-term climatological average by 1.4C. Met Office scientist Emily Carlisle has said: 'The data clearly shows that recent decades have been warmer, sunnier, and often drier than the 20th century average. 'This spring shows some of the changes we're seeing in our weather patterns, with more extreme conditions, including prolonged dry, sunny weather.' Today: After a bright start, skies will turn increasingly cloudy through the day. Rain will spread in from the west, moving across Northern Ireland, Scotland and parts of northern England and Wales. Staying dry and warm in the South. Outbreaks of rain will continue in the North at first, but will gradually clear to the east in the early hours. Dry and cloudy in the south and increasingly windy. Tuesday: Cloudy for most at first on Tuesday, but skies will gradually brighten across northern areas. Cloudier in the south with drizzly showers, but also feeling humid, warm and breezy. Wednesday to Friday: Turning increasingly warm and humid, and feeling hot in the south. Plenty of dry and fine weather, but thundery showers will likely move northwards during Thursday and later on Friday.