30,000 Under Evacuation Orders In Los Angeles’ Pacific Palisades (Photos)

30,000 Under Evacuation Orders In Los Angeles’ Pacific Palisades (Photos)
30,000 Under Evacuation Orders In Los Angeles’ Pacific Palisades (Photos)

Topline

The Pacific Palisades wildfire, affecting one of Los Angeles’ affluent residential neighborhoods, continued to grow rapidly on Tuesday night—covering nearly 3,000 acres—while another wildfire burning in the San Gabriel Mountains above Pasadena grew to cover a 1,000 acres, triggering evacuation orders for tens of thousands of people as authorities warned the situation will likely worsen on Wednesday due to fast-moving winds.

A Firefighter fights the flames from the Palisades Fire burning the Theatre Palisades during a … [+] powerful windstorm in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles, California.

Getty Images

Key Facts

The Palisades Fire began around 11 a.m. local time on Tuesday and has burned more than 2,900 acres as of 12.40 a.m. PST on Wednesday, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, which issued evacuation orders for residents of the Palisades and for those living along a stretch of the Pacific Coast Highway.

About 30,000 residents in the Palisades and nearby areas are under evacuation orders, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department, as Cal Fire reported 0% fire containment as of early Wednesday.

Another blaze, called the Eaton Fire, burning near Altadena, Pasadena and Sierra Madre grew rapidly to cover 1,000 acres shortly after midnight on Wednesday, triggering another wave of mandatory evacuations and school closures.

City officials said least 550 homes in Pasadena are affected by the evacuation orders which cover large portions of the city’s northern neighborhoods along with most of eastern Altadena and nearly the entirety of Sierra Madre.

Another wildfire around LA area, the Hurst Fire, broke out near the suburb of Sylmar on Tuesday night, and has grown to cover 500 acres as of 1:22 a.m. PST, prompting the Los Angeles Fire Department to issue more evacuation orders.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency on Tuesday night as he urged residents to heed the evacuation order and said, “This is a highly dangerous windstorm creating extreme fire risk, and we’re not out of the woods.”

The National Weather Service issued a red flag warning (warm temperatures, strong winds and low humidity) for Southern California that spans from Tuesday to Wednesday in the Santa Barbara, Los Angeles and Ventura counties, and from Tuesday to Thursday in the San Bernadino, , Riverside and San Diego counties.

The NWS expects wind gusts of 50 to 80 mph in parts of southern California and up to 100 mph gusts in mountains and foothills into Wednesday night, noting a potential for downed trees and power lines that could create “widespread power outages.”

Sporadic power outages have materialized in the San Fernando Valley, a highly populated area north of the Hollywood Hills, with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power reporting a few thousand customers without power as of 5 p.m. PST.

Plumes of smoke are seen just a few miles north of the Santa Monica pier. (Photo by AGUSTIN … [+] PAULLIER/AFP via Getty Images)

AFP via Getty Images

A brush fire burns near a neighborhood in the Pacific Palisades. (Photo by DAVID SWANSON/AFP via … [+] Getty Images)

AFP via Getty Images

The Palisades Fire burns north of Los Angeles International Airport (LAX). (Robbin Goddard/Los … [+] Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

A firefighter tries to extinguish a fire as it damages a property in the Pacific Palisades. (AP … [+] Photo/Ethan Swope)

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

A brush fire burns near homes in Pacific Palisades. (Photo by DAVID SWANSON/AFP via Getty Images)

AFP via Getty Images

The Palisades Fire burns near homes amid a powerful windstorm on January 7, 2025 in Pacific … [+] Palisades, California. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)

Getty Images

Has The Fire Impacted Lax Flights?

Los Angeles International Airport, which is about 19 miles south of the Pacific Palisades, has not experienced significant flight delays or cancellations as of Tuesday afternoon, according to FlightAware.

Where Might Fires Form In Southern California?

The National Weather Service’s fire outlook warns of elevated to critical fire weather Tuesday across much of southern California. The range of the critical fire weather alert will expand by 278 square miles Wednesday to a total of 5,035 square miles in the region. The NWS also issued an extreme fire weather alert—its highest designation for fire potential—from Wednesday to Thursday for a 1,463-square mile stretch of land that includes areas such as Santa Clarita, Simi Valley, Altadena, Moorpark and Santa Paula.

Key Background

The appearance of weather conditions suggestive of La Niña, a climate phenomenon linked to drier conditions and drought in southern parts of the U.S., have likely contributed to prime fire conditions across southern California. Los Angeles in particular has seen an underwhelming amount of rain in the last eight months alongside a dry winter. The last time the city recorded over a tenth of an inch of rainfall was last May, according to the Los Angeles Times, contributing to drought. The mix of dry conditions and strong winds are the main catalysts of Tuesday’s fires and also contributed to another fire in the Pacific Palisades in 2021 that burned more than 1,200 acres.

Further Reading

With negligible rain in 8 months, Southern California swings toward drought (LA Times)

Residents flee on foot as Palisades Fire torches hillside homes (LAist)

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