August 2020 California lightning wildfires
A series of 650 wildfires ignited across Northern California in mid-August 2020, due to a siege of dry lightning from rare, massive summer thunderstorms, which were caused by an unusual combination of very hot, dry air at the surface, dry fuels, and advection of moisture from the remains of Tropical Storm Fausto northward into the Bay Area. These fires burned between to within a 2–3 week period. The August 2020 lightning fires included three enormous wildfires: the SCU Lightning Complex, the August Complex, and the LNU Lightning Complex. On September 10, 2020, the August Complex set a record for the single-largest wildfire in the modern history of California, reaching a total area burned of. On September 11, the August Complex merged with the Elkhorn Fire, another massive wildfire of, turning the August Complex into a monster wildfire of.
The three major Bay Area fires, the SCU, LNU, and the CZU Lightning Complex, collectively burned about by mid-September 2020, destroyed 2,723 structures, and took 6 lives.
Meteorological background
Between August 14 and August 16, Northern California was subjected to record-breaking warm temperatures, due to anomalously strong high pressure over the region. Early on August 15, the National Weather Service for San Francisco issued a Fire Weather Watch highlighting the risk of wildfire starts due to the combination of lightning risk due to moist, unstable air aloft, dry fuels, and hot temperatures near the surface. Later that day, the Fire Weather Watch was upgraded to a Red Flag Warning, noting the risk of abundant lightning already apparent as the storms moved toward the region from the south.The source of this plume of moist, unstable air was the weakening Tropical Storm Fausto. Due to abnormal winds, this plume was streaming from up to off the coast of the Baja Peninsula into Northern California. This moisture then interacted with a high-pressure ridge situated over Nevada that was bringing a long-track heat wave to much of California and the West. These colliding weather systems then created excessive atmospheric instability that generated massive thunderstorms throughout much of Northern and Central California. Such thunderstorms are rare for California, but were more typical of Midwest garden-variety storms, with one location near Travis Air Force Base going from around to in nearly 1–2 hours. Additionally, much of these storms were only accompanied with dry lightning and produced little to no rain, making conditions very favorable for wildfires to spark and spread rapidly.
Early morning on August 16, when the first thunderstorms hit, around 2,500 lightning strikes hit the Bay Area, with 200 strikes happening in 30 minutes at one point, which the National Weather Service office in Bay Area labelled as "insane". Within the next 72–96 hours, over 12,000 lightning strikes were recorded over Northern California. These lightning strikes sparked up to 585 wildfires, many of which grew to be very large at a rapid pace due to parched brush, especially in Northern California.
A second wave of thunderstorms was forecasted to hit on August 23 and 24; however, they failed to materialize over the Bay Area, which has been most impacted by these fires, and instead just produced light rain and a few lightning strikes over the Sierra Nevada, barely having any impact.
Fires
Many of the fires were started or discovered on August 16 or 17:| Name | County | Acres | Start date | Containment date | Notes | Ref |
| Wolf | Tuolumne | 2,057 | 11 8 2020 | 20.11.2020 | Lightning-sparked | |
| Lake | Los Angeles | 31,089 | 12 8 2020 | 28 9 2020 | Lightning-sparked, 33 structures destroyed; 6 damaged; 21 outbuildings destroyed; 2 injuries | |
| Hills | Fresno | 2,121 | 15 8 2020 | 24 8 2020 | Lightning-sparked; 1 fatality | |
| Loyalton | Lassen, Plumas, Sierra | 47,029 | 15 8 2020 | 14 9 2020 | Lightning-sparked, Caused National Weather Service to issue first ever Fire Tornado Warning; 5 homes, 6 outbuildings destroyed | |
| River | Monterey | 48,088 | 16 8 2020 | 4 9 2020 | Caused by a lightning strike, 4 injuries | |
| Dome | San Bernardino | 43,273 | 16 8 2020 | 14 9 2020 | Caused by a lightning strike, burned in the Mojave National Preserve | |
| Beach | Mono | 3,780 | 16 8 2020 | 28 8 2020 | Caused by a lightning strike | |
| SCU Lightning Complex | Santa Clara, Alameda, Contra Costa, San Joaquin, Merced, Stanislaus | 396,624 | 16 8 2020 | 1 10 2020 | Deer Zone, Marsh, Canyon Zone and other surrounding fires combined into one multi-fire incident by CalFire; all believed to have been sparked by an intense and widespread lightning storm; 136 structures destroyed; 26 structures damaged; 5 injuries. | |
| August Complex | Glenn, Mendocino, Lake, Tehama, Trinity | 1,032,648 | 16 8 2020 | 12.11.2020 | Lightning strikes started 37 fires and the Elkhorn Fire, several of which grew to large sizes, especially the Doe Fire; the fire merged with the Elkhorn Fire on September 11, becoming the largest recorded wildfire in California history. 933 structures destroyed; 2 injuries; 1 fatality | |
| CZU Lightning Complex | San Mateo, Santa Cruz | 86,509 | 16 8 2020 | 22 9 2020 | Several lightning-sparked fires burning close together across San Mateo and Santa Cruz Counties; 1,490 structures destroyed; 140 structures damaged; 1 injury; 1 fatality. | |
| Rattlesnake | Tulare | 8,419 | 16 8 2020 | 29.12.2020 | Lightning sparked a slow-growing fire in inaccessible terrain. | |
| LNU Lightning Complex | Colusa, Lake, Napa, Sonoma, Solano, Yolo | 363,220 | 17 8 2020 | 2 10 2020 | Multi-fire incident that includes the Hennessey Fire, the Walbridge Fire, and the Meyers Fire sparked by lightning; 1,491 structures destroyed; 232 structures damaged; 4 injuries; 6 fatalities. It is the fifth-largest fire complex in California history. | |
| Butte/Tehama/Glenn Lightning Complex | Butte | 19,609 | 17 8 2020 | 16.10.2020 | Lightning sparked 34 fires throughout Butte County | |
| North Complex | Plumas, Butte | 318,935 | 17 8 2020 | 4 12 2020 | Lightning strikes, includes the Claremont Fire and the Bear Fire; 2,471 structures destroyed; 31 structures damaged; 16 fatalities; 13 injuries; It is the sixth-largest fire in modern California history. | |
| Jones | Nevada | 705 | 17 8 2020 | 28 8 2020 | Lightning sparked, 21 structures destroyed, 3 structures damaged, 7 injuries | |
| Sheep | Plumas, Lassen | 29,570 | 17 8 2020 | 9 9 2020 | Lightning-sparked, 26 structures destroyed, 1 injury | |
| Salt | Calaveras | 1,789 | 18 8 2020 | 24 8 2020 | Lightning-sparked | |
| W-5 Cold Springs | Lassen | 84,817 | 18 8 2020 | 14 9 2020 | Lightning-sparked | |
| Carmel | Monterey | 6,905 | 18 8 2020 | 4 9 2020 | Lightning-sparked, 73 structures destroyed; 7 structures damaged | |
| Woodward | Marin | 4,929 | 19 8 2020 | 2 10 2020 | Lightning-sparked, 1,600 structures threatened | |
| SQF Complex | Tulare | 174,178 | Lightning-sparked, contains the Castle Fire and the Shotgun Fire | |||
| Moc | Tuolumne | 2,857 | 20 8 2020 | 30 8 2020 | Lightning-sparked |