07/07/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/07/2026 11:29
(July 7, 2026 launch / Credit: Earth Fire Alliance)
What you need to know: Governor Newsom builds on multi-year investments in wildfire technology with three new wildfire-detection satellites launched today from Southern California to give firefighters faster, more precise intelligence to spot fires earlier and protect communities
SACRAMENTO - Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the historic launch of the first three FireSat wildfire detection satellites from Vandenberg Space Force Base, a partnership between California and Earth Fire Alliance (EFA), a global nonprofit coalition working to deliver real-time wildfire data to fire agencies around the world.
FireSat is about more than satellites in the sky; it's about protecting families, firefighters, and communities that live with the fear of wildfire every summer. While the Trump administration walks away from its responsibility to keep people safe, California is choosing leadership, innovation, and action. We are proving that when we invest in science, in technology, and in one another, we can turn the tide on these fires and build a safer, more resilient future.
Governor Gavin Newsom
Built by California-based spacecraft manufacturer Muon Space, FireSat is the first satellite system specifically designed to detect wildfires. These three satellites will begin delivering wildfire data within months, the first step toward a full constellation of more than 50 satellites by 2030 that will cover the entire planet every 20 minutes, catching fires as small as a schoolyard before they grow into megafires.
(July 7, 2026 launch / Credit: Earth Fire Alliance)
These three satellites will use frequent high-resolution data to identify and monitor wildfires in real time - helping firefighters combat wildfires and protect life and property. Following liftoff, the satellites will undergo a three-month commissioning and calibration period before beginning operational data delivery. The launch represents years of collaboration and innovation to improve operational wildfire readiness and enhance frontline situational awareness.
"The FireSat launch marks a transformative step toward space-enabled wildfire intelligence, strengthening California's resilience and demonstrating the power of global collaboration in confronting increasingly complex fire years," said CAL FIRE Director and Fire Chief Joe Tyler.
California, through CAL FIRE, played a foundational role in FireSat's development, conducting early testing and concept evaluation even before EFA formally existed. That early leadership and willingness to pioneer new tools helped transform FireSat from an emerging idea into a global wildfire-intelligence capability.
"FireSat represents a fundamental shift in how we detect, understand, and respond to wildfire," said Chris Anthony, Board Member, Earth Fire Alliance, and former CAL FIRE Chief Deputy Director. "This launch reflects years of collaboration among fire agencies, Earth Fire Alliance, philanthropy, and technology partners and marks the beginning of a new era in global wildfire intelligence."
As the global leader in technology and innovation, California has harnessed cutting-edge tools to strengthen its wildfire response and protect communities.
Under Governor Newsom's leadership, the state has deployed AI-powered wildfire detection systems, expanded the ALERTCalifornia network of more than 1,000 high-definition cameras, invested in drones, satellite monitoring, real-time fire modeling, and advanced mapping technologies that help firefighters detect fires earlier, predict their spread, and deploy resources more effectively.
These technology investments complement a historic commitment to wildfire preparedness: California has nearly doubled its fire protection budget from $2 billion to $3.8 billion and invested more than $2.5 billion in wildfire resilience and forest health projects. Together, these investments are helping California fight fires faster, smarter, and more effectively while building long-term resilience against increasingly severe wildfire seasons.
Here's a closer look at the tools driving that progress:
As President Trump weakens wildfire preparedness nationwide, Governor Newsom is moving California in the opposite direction by expanding firefighting capacity, investing in new technology, and strengthening the state's ability to detect and respond to dangerous wildfires. That contrast is especially stark for high-fire-risk communities that depend on strong prevention, suppression, and emergency response systems
President Trump has made dramatic cuts to wildfire readiness across the United States, and rural, high-fire-risk communities are bearing the brunt. In the final year of the Biden administration, the Forest Service treated more than 4 million acres of hazardous vegetation to reduce wildfire risk. Under Trump, that number plummeted to 2.6 million acres, a drop of nearly 1.5 million acres heading into what experts warn could be an extreme fire season. Prescribed burns fell by nearly half, dropping from over 1.6 million acres in 2024 to roughly 900,000 acres in 2025, and the administration eliminated a decades-old fire risk assessment program that helped firefighters identify dead and dying trees before they became fuel for the next catastrophic blaze.
The damage runs deeper than lost acreage as federal firefighting capacity is thinning where it's needed most. That staffing crisis is already playing out on the fire line: the number of federal employees able to fight fires has dropped from 18,700 in 2024 to just over 17,000 today, and a June 2026 Government Accountability Office report found the Forest Service's workforce shrank by roughly 20% following a February 2025 executive order mandating sweeping reductions.