HomeSouth CarolinaFire officials lock down outdoor burning across South Carolina amid worsening conditions

Fire officials lock down outdoor burning across South Carolina amid worsening conditions

Columbia, South Carolina – South Carolina entered a more dangerous stretch of fire weather Friday morning as the South Carolina Forestry Commission moved to shut down outdoor burning across every county in the state.

The statewide State Forester’s Burning Ban took effect at 7 a.m. April 17, putting broad restrictions in place as officials warned that conditions were lining up for fast-moving, hard-to-control wildfires.

The order covers all unincorporated areas of South Carolina and bars nearly every kind of outdoor burning. That includes yard debris fires, prescribed burns, campfires, bonfires and other recreational flames.

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The decision comes as fire officials track a troubling blend of worsening drought, dropping humidity and gusty winds expected to build with an approaching cold front.

According to the Forestry Commission, those factors are creating an unusually volatile setup through the weekend.

Dry ground across the state has already pushed wildfire risk higher, and the addition of stronger wind and thinner moisture in the air could make even a small spark far more dangerous than usual. In that environment, a fire can catch quickly, spread fast and become much harder for crews to contain.

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SCFC Fire Chief Darryl Jones said the situation is especially serious because current conditions point to fires being heavily driven by available fuel.

“When it’s this dry – energy release component values are at high-to-critical levels – we’re just as likely, if not more, to see wildfires that are fuel-driven rather than wind-driven. Add the other volatile conditions of increased wind and lower relative humidity, and it becomes an especially precarious situation,” said SCFC Fire Chief Darryl Jones.

“These conditions not only increase the likelihood of wildfires igniting easily and spreading rapidly, but would also make them more difficult for firefighters to control.”

There are limited exceptions under the ban. Fires used for cooking are still allowed, as are fires contained in proper enclosures such as portable outdoor fireplaces, chimineas or permanent fire pits made from noncombustible materials and built in line with South Carolina fire codes.

Forestry officials are urging people not to take those allowances lightly.

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The agency is also asking residents to be careful with anything that could throw sparks. That includes outdoor equipment, vehicles parked on dry grass and fireworks, all of which can trigger fires under current conditions.

The ban will remain in place until the Forestry Commission announces that it is safe to lift it. Until then, officials are making one point unmistakably clear: with South Carolina this dry, caution is no longer optional.

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