simianparrot 18 hours ago

> To be fair we are talking about an area of the country that is prone to seismic activity, it does limit the building materials.

Japan comes to mind as a country that's solved this.

> Where does LA get most of its water? Local sources? I don't think that's the case.

Relevant: https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2025-01-10/as-flame...

2
niemandhier 17 hours ago

Sure Japan did it, so did Mexico. The latter is probably much more important as an example for the US.

https://www.preventionweb.net/news/not-drill-how-1985-disast...

galangalalgol 16 hours ago

Many of the gouses burning weren't built to current codes, but the cost to retrofit houses to code was insurmountable by any of the owners and apparently by the state or even the nation. So they will just wait for them all to burn and then rebuild them I guess?

forgotmysn 9 hours ago

Mexico is in the middle of a crippling drought

umeshunni 5 hours ago

what does that have to do earthquakes?

contravariant 17 hours ago

I would be interested to know how Japan combats wildfires. Historically at least it was quite a big problem, if I recall correctly.