Zürcher Nachrichten - What is the pink stuff coating fire-ravaged Los Angeles?

EUR -
AED 3.781947
AFN 74.124044
ALL 98.281521
AMD 410.66218
ANG 1.847462
AOA 941.623487
ARS 1071.11266
AUD 1.663849
AWG 1.853396
AZN 1.751475
BAM 1.955144
BBD 2.069685
BDT 124.548201
BGN 1.956
BHD 0.388109
BIF 3032.538091
BMD 1.029664
BND 1.404108
BOB 7.083623
BRL 6.236576
BSD 1.025046
BTN 88.711228
BWP 14.428018
BYN 3.354642
BYR 20181.423038
BZD 2.059089
CAD 1.478603
CDF 2919.098851
CHF 0.93957
CLF 0.037562
CLP 1036.488441
CNY 7.549188
CNH 7.564878
COP 4413.605142
CRC 516.619095
CUC 1.029664
CUP 27.286108
CVE 110.228007
CZK 25.271984
DJF 182.536967
DKK 7.460742
DOP 62.708041
DZD 139.964322
EGP 51.942863
ERN 15.444967
ETB 130.041046
FJD 2.399684
FKP 0.848018
GBP 0.843797
GEL 2.924054
GGP 0.848018
GHS 15.290201
GIP 0.848018
GMD 73.617524
GNF 8912.775086
GTQ 7.906347
GYD 214.458027
HKD 8.020906
HNL 26.235923
HRK 7.598458
HTG 133.823789
HUF 411.999528
IDR 16780.132491
ILS 3.738325
IMP 0.848018
INR 89.052022
IQD 1348.860417
IRR 43336.001153
ISK 144.904241
JEP 0.848018
JMD 160.533786
JOD 0.730443
JPY 161.992475
KES 133.337984
KGS 90.043652
KHR 4160.874053
KMF 492.41128
KPW 926.698111
KRW 1503.85063
KWD 0.317703
KYD 0.854213
KZT 543.547583
LAK 22467.278042
LBP 92206.45108
LKR 301.935737
LRD 192.203629
LSL 19.501641
LTL 3.040331
LVL 0.622833
LYD 5.101967
MAD 10.36568
MDL 19.271532
MGA 4844.57141
MKD 61.512564
MMK 3344.309939
MNT 3498.79988
MOP 8.220441
MRU 41.104023
MUR 48.31196
MVR 15.861968
MWK 1787.49773
MXN 21.145446
MYR 4.637092
MZN 65.773613
NAD 19.502127
NGN 1600.397091
NIO 37.819345
NOK 11.722622
NPR 141.936298
NZD 1.838391
OMR 0.396409
PAB 1.025056
PEN 3.885441
PGK 4.079503
PHP 60.416077
PKR 286.915973
PLN 4.265648
PYG 8077.210812
QAR 3.748751
RON 4.974622
RSD 117.111642
RUB 105.023773
RWF 1427.506187
SAR 3.86499
SBD 8.726597
SCR 15.473367
SDG 618.828257
SEK 11.517754
SGD 1.407953
SHP 0.848018
SLE 23.376269
SLL 21591.548407
SOS 588.430006
SRD 36.146359
STD 21311.975038
SVC 8.96899
SYP 13387.697043
SZL 19.501615
THB 35.771055
TJS 11.20414
TMT 3.603826
TND 3.315796
TOP 2.411577
TRY 36.550374
TTD 6.959664
TWD 34.029893
TZS 2589.606164
UAH 43.328338
UGX 3788.728488
USD 1.029664
UYU 45.074873
UZS 13296.537631
VES 55.495747
VND 26139.061492
VUV 122.24383
WST 2.883912
XAF 655.730566
XAG 0.034498
XAU 0.000384
XCD 2.782719
XDR 0.790127
XOF 657.44274
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.401876
ZAR 19.48902
ZMK 9268.245868
ZMW 28.420186
ZWL 331.55153
  • RBGPF

    60.6700

    60.67

    +100%

  • SCS

    0.1100

    11.24

    +0.98%

  • NGG

    -0.1600

    56.27

    -0.28%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    22.88

    +0.35%

  • RIO

    0.8600

    60.38

    +1.42%

  • BCC

    3.1000

    123.61

    +2.51%

  • BCE

    -0.6700

    22.54

    -2.97%

  • GSK

    -0.6200

    32.08

    -1.93%

  • RELX

    0.1800

    46.08

    +0.39%

  • BTI

    0.3700

    35.72

    +1.04%

  • JRI

    0.1900

    12.23

    +1.55%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    23.2

    +0.39%

  • AZN

    -0.3600

    65.37

    -0.55%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0400

    6.91

    -0.58%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    8.25

    +0.61%

  • BP

    -0.1300

    31.09

    -0.42%

What is the pink stuff coating fire-ravaged Los Angeles?
What is the pink stuff coating fire-ravaged Los Angeles? / Photo: AGUSTIN PAULLIER - AFP

What is the pink stuff coating fire-ravaged Los Angeles?

Above the roaring fires devastating parts of Los Angeles is an incongruous sight: air tankers dropping gallons of bright red and Barbie-pink slurry over forest, homes, cars, and anything else that might lie in the blazes' path.

Text size:

The substance, vivid against the grey smoke and charred landscape, is fire retardant -- much of it a product called Phos-Chek that has been used by the US Forest Service since the 1960s.

"You can see it so easily ... it's amazing stuff," says Jason Colquhoun, a 53-year-old pilot with HeliQwest, a charter helicopter company specializing in putting out fires.

But over the past week it's been dropped on residential neighborhoods at an "unprecedented" scale, says Daniel McCurry, an assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Southern California.

That's led to one overwhelming question: how safe is it?

- Fertilizer and rust -

Sold by fire protection equipment supplier Perimeter Solutions, Phos-Check is a mixture of primarily ammonium phosphate -- a common fertilizer -- with additives such as iron oxide -- rust -- to give it color.

Its bright hue helps pilots as they try to ensure overlapping, unbroken lines around the fires, Colquhoun explains.

When pilots drop water from the air, he says, they must search for "the shine and the darkness" to know where to make the next drop. The vivid retardant, however? "So much easier to spot."

The other advantage compared to water: it keeps working, even after the water it is mixed with evaporates, McCurry says.

Thickeners add viscosity and help ensure it doesn't drift off target, adds McCurry, who led recent research into heavy metal content in such retardants.

It comes in a powder and is mixed in -- essentially -- giant paddling pools, before being loaded on to airplanes and helicopters for coordinated drops, Colquhoun says.

He gave an enthusiastic "Oh yeah" when asked by AFP if it works.

McCurry said he has seen photos "where a brush fire burned right up to a Phos-Chek line and then stopped," but expressed some caution.

He cited a former firefighter as telling him that in a high-intensity fire it's "not much use," and said that the high winds which have fanned the fires in Los Angeles may have limited its effectiveness.

- 'Practically non-toxic' -

The Forest Service said it only uses retardants that "meet the Environmental Protection Agency's criteria for being 'practically non-toxic' to mammals, including humans, and aquatic species."

It prohibits drops in waterways and areas that are home to threatened or endangered species -- the only exception being "where human life or public safety is threatened" and the retardant could be "reasonably expected" to stave off that threat, a spokesman told AFP.

But accidents do happen, he said, "whether through wind drift or an inadvertent drop."

The service says it phased out Phos-Chek's older formulation, LC95 -- which McCurry's study showed had high levels of heavy metals that can contaminate drinking water -- nationwide as of December 31.

Now it uses a new, less toxic formulation called MVP-Fx, it says.

The agency's data shows the mixture can cause skin irritation and, if swallowed, can lead to vomiting and nausea, advising medical attention if washing with water does not ease the symptoms.

McCurry says the Forest Service has been successfully sued in the past on environmental grounds, and that Phos-Chek is "likely not harmless to the environment" now.

"On the other hand, the human health impact is still a little unclear," he says.

He says it would take "a lot" of retardant to poison, say, a reservoir.

"However in the last week we've seen it dropped on neighborhoods at an unprecedented scale," he continues, adding that it's more often used further from populated areas, or in lower amounts.

"So, who knows."

U.Ammann--NZN