The Epic Texas Panhandle Fire Is Just a Preview (2024)

Editor’s Note: This article is reprinted with permission from the Sierra Club magazine.

On February 26, a tiny flame sparked a mile north of the ranching community of Stinnett, Texas. This part of the Texas Panhandle is sparsely populated—Hutchinson County has 20,000 people and roughly the same number of cows—so no one saw the smoldering patch of tall, dry grass where two county roads intersect. By the time area residents took notice of the smoke, it was too late: The fire had already spread into fallow fields and untamed barrow ditches, morphing into a monster in mere hours. By evening, the blaze—soon dubbed the Smokehouse Creek Fire—had reached 62 square miles. Firefighters were dispatched from all over Texas and beyond to try to prevent the entire Panhandle from going up in smoke.

Three weeks later, firefighters finally extinguished the Smokehouse Creek Fire and several other blazes that started around the same time. Those fires destroyed 500 structures, mostly in the towns of Fritch and Canadian, and forced hundreds more evacuations as they devoured barbed-wire fences and killed upwards of 7,000 head of cattle. The scar left on the Panhandle landscape is visible from space. Two people were killed: an 83-year-old grandmother in Stinnett who died after her home caught fire and the volunteer fire chief in Fritch, who had battled the blaze for over a week.

The fire’s size—1 million acres—was unprecedented in Texas. It was eight times bigger than California’s 2018 Camp Fire, the most destructive in that state’s history.

The Camp Fire was caused by faulty transmission lines owned by Pacific Gas & Electric. (The utility filed for bankruptcy protection the following year.) Already, Xcel Energy, a Minneapolis-based electric utility and natural gas delivery company, has told state fire investigators that its equipment apparently started the Smokehouse Creek blaze. A rancher in Stinnett has filed a lawsuit against the company, alleging gross negligence in the maintenance and inspection of its transmission equipment. Xcel Energy has denied negligence, stating that a subcontractor, Osmose Utilities Services, is responsible for conducting federally mandated inspections of the company’s power poles and electrical lines. A separate fire that was sparked in the Panhandle about the same time as the Smokehouse Creek Fire also appears to have been caused by electrical equipment, state investigators say.

It’s a familiar cause of Texas wildfires. In 2016, malfunctioning power lines running to a pumpjack near Pampa leaked molten metal on dry grass, sparking a fire that burned 135,000 acres and killed three people. In 2011, fallen power lines ignited a blaze in Bastrop County, just east of Austin, reducing 1,500 homes to rubble and killing two people before being extinguished.

Utility-related fires, in fact, are wreaking havoc across the United States. Since 2017, fires related to electricity transmission have burned at least 3 million acres, much of it in the heavily wooded Pacific Northwest. The companies responsible for them, such as PG&E, have been subject to intense public criticism and congressional inquiries. Until now, Xcel has managed to avoid such a glaring spotlight. In recent years, the company has enjoyed a reasonably good reputation with environmentalists for its focus on building out wind energy and its pledge to go carbon-free by 2050. But in March 2023, it was discovered that an Xcel-owned nuclear power plant in Minnesota had leaked 400,000 gallons of radioactive water—a fact that was concealed from the public for months. Now the company is contending with another round of bad press.

In September, a commission formed by the Biden administration to study wildfire mitigation released a 340-page report containing 140 recommendations to counter the growing problem. It suggested safety measures such as upgrading utility lines, replacing old poles, and installing sensors to detect fallen poles and sagging lines. The report also notes that climate change makes the task more urgent: “Climate change poses an additional challenge by fundamentally shifting wildfire risk, fire behavior, and the trajectory of postfire recovery in ways that current fire behavior models … are not designed to meet.”

Climate change has accelerated wildfires in recent years, increasing their frequency and destructive potential, says Amy Bailey, director of climate resilience and sustainability at the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions. “The wildfires that we’re seeing are becoming larger, and they’re increasingly burning closer to communities,” she says. “We saw a very large increase in the number of structures lost to wildfires over the past couple of decades, and also moving into places that haven’t had as much history of wildfires—communities and landscapes that might not be accustomed to something like that.” Climate change effectively doubled the number of large fires in the western United States between 1984 and 2015, along with exposing wildfire-prone areas to extended periods of fire danger. Melanie McQuiddy, the Stinnett rancher who filed suit against Xcel Energy, put it this way in her complaint: “So-called wildfire seasons have been stretched into an almost year-round schedule of high fire risk.”

In December, the Biden administration announced new rules to combat methane emissions from the oil and gas sector. Methane is responsible for “one-third of the warming from greenhouse gases occurring today,” the EPA wrote, adding that oil and gas operations represent the nation’s largest industrial sources of the “climate super-pollutant.” The plan’s mandates that oil and gas companies plug abandoned wells and invest in cleaner technologies immediately drew the ire of officials in oil-friendly Texas. State Attorney General Ken Paxton, who has been under indictment for the last decade on fraud charges and who was impeached last year by the Texas Legislature, filed suit against the EPA over the new rule. On March 8, as firefighters risked their lives to fight the Smokehouse Creek Fire across a piece of land the size of Delaware, Paxton was busy filing the complaint with a federal judge. The rule, he said,“establishes onerous emissions standards for the oil and gas industry that would require producers to drastically update infrastructure.”

That’s a typical reaction from a Texas official after being smacked by a natural disaster. Consider Governor Greg Abbott’s response to the February 2021 winter storm that left millions of Texas without power in frigid temperatures. Though the state’s power grid failure was largely due to frozen natural gas lines and stuttering coal-fired power plants, Abbott told conservative pundit Sean Hannity that the failure was due to inoperable wind turbines and solar panels. “The Green New Deal would be a deadly deal for the United States of America,” Abbott said of the winter storm that killed 246 people. Many more are likely to die—from ice, and from fire—if Abbott and other Texas officials continue to ignore the threat of climate change.

The Epic Texas Panhandle Fire Is Just a Preview (2024)

FAQs

What caused the Panhandle fire in Texas? ›

On Thursday, the Texas A&M Forest Service said its investigators determined that power lines caused the Smokehouse Creek fire that burned McQuiddy's house, as well as another fire called Windy Deuce. Utility company Xcel Energy said it appeared that its equipment was involved in igniting the Smokehouse Creek fire.

What started the 2024 Texas Panhandle fire? ›

The Texas A&M Forest Service concluded that a fallen decayed utility pole caused the Smokehouse Creek fire. Subscribe to The Y'all — a weekly dispatch about the people, places and policies defining Texas, produced by Texas Tribune journalists living in communities across the state.

Is the Texas Panhandle fire contained? ›

Texas firefighters completely contain Panhandle inferno that burned more than 1 million acres. A series of deadly wildfires have burned for nearly three weeks, destroying farms and ranches in several counties.

What started the Texas fire? ›

Investigators now say the largest wildfire in Texas history might have been caused by an old power line. And the utility, Xcel Energy, says its facilities appear to have been involved in the Smokehouse Creek fire. NPR's Julia Simon looks at the growing risk nationwide from aging utility infrastructure.

What was the largest fire in Texas history? ›

On February 26, 2024, the Smokehouse Creek Fire ignited in Hutchinson County and quickly burned more than 1 million acres under dry, warm and windy conditions. This is now the largest fire in recorded Texas history.

What was the biggest fire in Texas? ›

The Smokehouse Creek Fire, the largest wildfire to ever burn in Texas, is now nearly completely contained after spreading across roughly 1.1 million acres. But as responders continue to fight the last of the blaze, officials warned they could be facing another hurdle in the Panhandle: critical fire weather.

How big is the Texas Panhandle fire? ›

The fire consumed over a million acres (400,000 hectares) becoming the largest wildfire in Texas state history. The fire is responsible for burning a hundred miles of power lines, thousands of cattle, and at least 30 homes.

How many acres burned in Texas in 2024? ›

The Smokehouse Creek Fire burned an estimated 1,058,482 acres (1,653.878 sq mi; 428,352 ha) in Texas and Oklahoma and was completely contained on March 16, becoming the second largest fire in US history dating back to 1988. It started on Monday, February 26, one mile north of Stinnett in Hutchinson County, Texas.

When did the Panhandle wildfires start? ›

The largest wildfire in Texas's state history broke out on Feb. 26, 2024 and quickly spread within days, fueled by dry, windy conditions. By Monday, March 4, the blaze, known as the Smokehouse Creek fire, had become one of the largest fires in U.S. history, though the initial cause is still unclear.

Is the Texas Panhandle cold? ›

The Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles might be known for their hot summer days, but nights from late autumn through early spring can be cold. The normal daily minimum temperatures are at or below freezing (32°F) for nearly one third of the year or more at locations around the Panhandles.

How much land has burned in Texas? ›

Texas Fires Span Over 1.2 Million Acres. Here Is What We Know.

Is the Texas wildfire still burning? ›

Active Wildfires:

Texas A&M Forest Service is not currently responding to any active wildfires burning across the state.

When did Big Texas burn down? ›

On October 19, 2012, the last weekend of the 2012 State Fair of Texas, Big Tex was destroyed by an electrical fire that started in the right boot and worked its way up the structure, first becoming visible from the neck area. After the fire, a new Big Tex was created by SRO Associates and Texas Scenic Co.

How big is Texas fire? ›

The Smokehouse Creek Fire – the largest wildfire to ever burn across Texas – is nearly completely contained after spreading almost 1.1 million acres. But as responders continue in the final stretch, officials warned Tuesday that they could face another hurdle – "extremely critical fire weather" in the Panhandle.

What was the cause of the Denton Mountain fire? ›

The Fergus County Fire Warden, Ryan Peterson, said on December 1 that a power line was the suspected cause of the fire that destroyed grain elevators and 25 homes in Denton, Montana that day. Winds gusting up to 65 mph pushed the fire, spreading for 18 miles from Highway 80 to the east well past Denton.

Who found the Texas Panhandle? ›

Contrary to conventional wisdom and traditional histories, the Texas Panhandle was not "settled" first in the late 1800s; it was, in fact, settled first some 800-900 years ago by prehistoric Plains villagers who left behind abundant and unmistakable evidence of their sustained presence.

What is the history of the Texas Panhandle? ›

Native Americans, Spanish explorers, cowboys, Texas Rangers, Buffalo Soldiers, and pioneers all gave the Panhandle a colorful history. The Comanche Indians lived in teepees on the grasslands and in the canyons of the Llano Estacado. They were nomads who rode horses and hunted bison.

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