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Pistachio moguls and reservoirs: False water claims spread about California fires

Many of the false narratives in the wake of the Los Angeles wildfires have involved water.
Apu Gomes/Getty Images
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Getty Images North America
Many of the false narratives in the wake of the Los Angeles wildfires have involved water.

As massive fires continue to sweep through Los Angeles, firefighters are relying on local water infrastructure not designed for fires of this size, researchers say. Fires in California , which is largely driven by humans burning oil, gas and coal.

And yet prominent right wing influencers and political figures, including , are falsely blaming the fires' destructiveness on the city not having enough water to fight the blazes. Some online commentators are falsely saying water needed to fight the fires is instead going to . Others are claiming, inaccurately, that and that it's part of a plan by a "" to turn burned land into . California Gov. Gavin °µºÚ±¬ÁÏom has made a , much of them about water.

"We're finger pointing away from the problem," says , director of the California Center for Sustainable Communities at UCLA. " We have really no lack of water. What we have is an infrastructure that is not made to fight cataclysmic fires, biblical-size fires."

A reservoir in the Palisades was empty while . And the water systems used to fight the Palisades and Eaton fires couldn't maintain the continuous high water pressures needed, meaning water stopped flowing in . °µºÚ±¬ÁÏom has .

But water and climate experts say that even if the Palisades reservoir had been full and hydrants working perfectly, they wouldn't have allowed firefighters to change the course of large wildfires. fueled the fires, and meant that in the first days planes and helicopters couldn't fly and drop water, experts say.

These municipal water systems were structured for residential and commercial needs and everyday fires – not firefighting on many fronts without aerial support, says , a climate researcher at University of Notre Dame who studies Los Angeles' infrastructure systems. " Trying to pretend that this system was built for this disaster is dishonest," he says.

Here's what you should know about the water situation and the fires.

Prominent right wing influencers and political figures are falsely blaming the fires' destructiveness on the city not having enough water to fight the blazes.
Ryan Kellman / NPR
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NPR
Prominent right wing influencers and political figures are falsely blaming the fires' destructiveness on the city not having enough water to fight the blazes.

Does Los Angeles have enough water to fight fires?

Los Angeles has access to more than enough water to fight the fires, says , director of water scarcity solutions at the non-profit Natural Resources Defense Council and a member of , founded in 1928. "I can say with great authority, we have as much water stored as any time in the history of our agency," he says.

Most local L.A. reservoirs have ample water in them. While Los Angeles has seen negligible rain in the last eight months, the previous two years saw extreme rainfall.

" There's way more water in local storage than you could ever fight a fire with," says Marty Adams, former general manager and chief engineer of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power or DWP.

Some of the false narratives about a lack of water for firefighting comes from , who blamed °µºÚ±¬ÁÏom for not directing water to Southern California from Northern California. That is inaccurate and "irrelevant to the situation" of the Los Angeles fires, Gold says.

And some conspiracy theories center around the billionaire owners of The Wonderful Company, Stewart and Lynda Resnick. The Resnicks' companies include Fiji Water and Pom Wonderful Pomegranate Juice, and they are America's largest pistachio growers, mostly growing them in California's Central Valley. , which use and , inaccurately claim that the Resnicks "" in California.

Many conspiracies involve water hydrants. The water systems used to fight the Palisades and Eaton fires couldn't maintain the continuous high water pressures needed, meaning water stopped flowing in some hydrants.
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images / Getty Images North America
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Getty Images North America
Many conspiracies involve water hydrants. The water systems used to fight the Palisades and Eaton fires couldn't maintain the continuous high water pressures needed, meaning water stopped flowing in some hydrants.

Pincetl says while the Resnicks have , she says their water usage is "distinct and not germane to the problem" of fighting wildfires.

"We have nothing to do with how the city of L.A. or any other municipality  secures water to fight fires," says , chief corporate affairs officer for .

What happened with a reservoir near the Palisades?

One reservoir near the Palisades, called the Santa Ynez reservoir, is currently empty during the firefight because .

An operational reservoir may have meant firefighters could have saved more structures, says , who directs a climate and energy program at Stanford University and studies wildfire. "But were you going to save the neighborhood? Probably not."

Still, some people have speculated that the reservoir was empty for nefarious reasons.

said, "I know they were messing with the water. Letting [water] reserves go for one reason or another… in the events like this, you sort of look, is it on purpose? Which it's an insane thing to think. But one begins to ponder. Whether or not there is a purpose in mind."

A fire burns in the hills of Los Angeles. Fires in California have grown more explosive because of climate change, which is largely driven by humans burning oil, gas and coal.
Ryan Kellman / NPR
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NPR
A fire burns in the hills of Los Angeles. Fires in California have grown more explosive because of climate change, which is largely driven by humans burning oil, gas and coal.

While such views are inaccurate, there is a growing narrative that water was deliberately withheld from Los Angeles communities to increase the burn area. The false narrative claims that would then make way for , an urban planning concept where your main daily needs are a close walk, bike or transit ride from home. There is a popular conspiracy theory, , that a cabal of global elites want to clear land and use 15-minute cities as .

"This is misinformation," , DWP's chief customer officer, said in an email.

In the early days of the firefight helicopters and planes that are key to dropping water could not fly because of hurricane-force winds.
Ali Matin/Middle East Images / AFP via Getty Images
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AFP via Getty Images
In the early days of the firefight helicopters and planes that are key to dropping water could not fly because of hurricane-force winds.

What happened to fire hydrants during the fire?

Some in both the Palisades and Eaton fires stopped working within the first 24-hours of the fires breaking out.

"We pushed the system to the extreme," Janisse Quiñones, DWP's chief executive and chief engineer, said . "Four times the normal demand was seen for 15 hours straight which lowered our water pressure."

Adams notes that most hydrants and water systems are designed for structure fires at individual homes, apartment buildings or commercial buildings, and not large wildfires. " No one's engineered for a fire like this," he says.

Gold says a main hurdle was the high winds in the early days of the fire that grounded aircraft that could have dropped a lot more water.

" You can't fight a wildfire of this scope and scale without any aerial support," Gold says. "We had two communities that were basically sitting ducks."

A pool in Brentwood covered with fire retardant.
Ryan Kellman / NPR
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NPR
A pool in Brentwood covered with fire retardant.

Why wasn't the Los Angeles water infrastructure prepared for the fires?

No city in the U.S. or the world would have been equipped with on-the-ground water infrastructure to completely snuff out huge wildfires like these, says , director of UCLA's Water Resources Group.

"Firefighting, especially in environments like this, it's not just about water. It's about, especially, aerial attacks," Pierce says. "Vegetation management, and firefighting capacity.

"That's going to be a huge debate about how to rebuild systems, about who's going to pay for it," Pierce says.

Copyright 2025 NPR

Julia Simon
Julia Simon is the Climate Solutions reporter on NPR's Climate Desk. She covers the ways governments, businesses, scientists and everyday people are working to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. She also works to hold corporations, and others, accountable for greenwashing.