Wildfire scorches Rupert Murdoch’s winery as it rips through Los Angeles

Fire tore through wealthy LA neighborhood and burned part of Murdoch winery, as some saw comeuppance for his climate change skepticism

A wildfire has ripped through one of Los Angeles’s wealthiest neighbourhoods and scorched part of a winery owned by media mogul Rupert Murdoch.

Flames fanned by strong winds reached a temperature-controlled wine storage shed on the mogul’s Moraga Vineyards estate on Wednesday after destroying at least six properties in Bel-Air and threatening hundreds more.

The so-called Skirball fire is one of multiple wildfires that flared across southern California this week, forcing thousands to flee and smothering cities in smoke which is expected to last several more days.

Vehicles pass beside a wall of flames on the 101 highway as it reaches the coast during the Thomas wildfire near Ventura, California on December 6, 2017. Photograph: MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images
Vehicles pass beside a wall of flames on the 101 highway as it reaches the coast during the Thomas wildfire near Ventura, California on December 6, 2017. Photograph: MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images

Firefighters backed by helicopters were unable to stop flames reaching Murdoch’s estate, a 2.8 hectare property he bought for $28.8m in 2013 after spotting an advert in the property section of the Wall Street Journal, which he owns.

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The estate has been evacuated. The house appeared undamaged on Wednesday night but the blaze was still largely out of control. It’s unclear how much wine was lost in the storage shed which burned.

“We are monitoring the situation as closely as we can and are grateful for the efforts of all the first responders,” Murdoch said in a statement. “Some of our neighbors have suffered heavy losses and our thoughts and prayers are with them at this time.”

California’s fire season usually ends in November but the hottest summer on record and delayed rains have left the region tinder-dry into December. Some scientists have linked the conditions to climate change.

Murdoch, 86, has ridiculed climate change as “alarmist nonsense”, a scepticism echoed in his media empire.

Some social media commentators seized on the fire as comeuppance and juxtaposed images of the blaze with a 2011 tweet in which the mogul mocked global warming.

A car destroyed by the Thomas Fire in the foothills of Ventura, California. Photograph: Hilary Swift/The New York Times
A car destroyed by the Thomas Fire in the foothills of Ventura, California. Photograph: Hilary Swift/The New York Times

Earlier this year the estate’s winemaker, Scott Rich, told the Guardianclimate change was aiding its production of sauvignon blanc and a cabernet-merlot dominant blend.

“We’re finishing harvest a little bit earlier than we used to,” he said in May. “It’s been a positive thing. We don’t get rained on. Rain can ruin everything for us.”

Asked if they had discussed the impact of a warming planet on the vineyard with his boss Rich said: “I have not. My general feeling about people’s beliefs is that I’m not going to change them regardless of the discussion. I haven’t broached it with him.”

The property resembles rural Tuscany but nestled amid the mega-mansions of Bel-Air, a wealthy neighbourhood in the Santa Monica mountains just west of Los Angeles.

Murdoch bought the estate, boasting steep vine-lined slopes and a 1920s Mediterranean-style house with nine bathrooms and 11 bedrooms, as a home for when he and wife, Jerry Hall, visit the US west coast.

A previous owner, Victor Fleming, the director of The Wizard of Oz and Gone with the Wind, used to host Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Ingrid Bergman and other Hollywood illuminati.

Murdoch called the winery a personal fascination as well as a business. “I try to help out on the property whenever I can and am looking forward to doing so even more in the future,” he told the Guardian via email in May.

A helicopter drops water over a house on the hilltop in Bel Air, Los Angeles, California. Photograph: FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images
A helicopter drops water over a house on the hilltop in Bel Air, Los Angeles, California. Photograph: FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images

“This year I’m hoping to be there for the harvest. I’m in contact with the staff almost daily and very aware of what is going on both in the vineyard and with regard to sales.”

Asked about the estate manager’s belief in climate change, Murdoch responded: “I’m not a climate denier. Climate is always changing. We just had years of drought in California. Now we’re having a lot of rain.”– Guardian