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Maui Wildfires: What We Know About Cause, Search Efforts and Damages

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A summer of ferocious weather across much of the United States has now yielded the nation’s deadliest wildfire in more than a century, 2,500 miles off the West Coast in Hawaii.

What began as scattered brush fires on the state’s biggest islands, Hawaii and Maui, turned deadly by the middle of last week. By Saturday evening local time, at least 93 people had been confirmed dead, and many on the island remain unaccounted for.

The rapid spread of the flames caught state officials and residents by surprise, and the Maui Emergency Management Agency estimates that it will cost $5.52 billion to rebuild in Maui County.

By Saturday, the death toll had reached 93, making the fire among the worst natural disasters in Hawaii’s history, and the nation’s deadliest wildfire since a blaze in northeast Minnesota killed hundreds of people in 1918.

No cause for the fire has been determined, but experts said one possibility was that active power lines that fell in high winds ignited the wildfire that ultimately spread to Lahaina, a coastal town of 13,000 in western Maui that was leveled.

Brush fires were already burning on Maui and the island of Hawaii on Tuesday. Those fires were stoked on Wednesday by a combination of low humidity and strong mountain winds, brought by Hurricane Dora, a Category 4 storm hundreds of miles to the south in the Pacific Ocean.

Questions are also mounting about whether officials could have warned residents with more notice or evacuated them sooner. None of the 80 warning sirens placed around Maui were activated by the island or state’s emergency management agencies as the fire bore down on Lahaina.

“We are going to do some reviews so we can make things safer going forward,” Gov. Josh Green said.

Claire Moses contributed reporting.

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