Home United States New Jersey Wildfire Could Grow To Be State’s Largest In Two Decades

New Jersey Wildfire Could Grow To Be State’s Largest In Two Decades

About 1,300 homes were endangered, and between 3,000 and 5,000 people were under mandatory or voluntary evacuation orders, which were lifted on Wednesday morning.
A man looks at smoke during a wildfire outbreak, in Lacey Township, in the Ocean County region of New Jersey, U.S., April 23, 2025. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

A rapidly spreading wildfire was burning through New Jersey’s Pinelands near its Atlantic beach towns on Wednesday, threatening to become the state’s largest in nearly two decades, officials said.

The Jones Road Wildfire had spread to 12,500 acres (50.6 sq km) on Wednesday afternoon and was 40% contained, the New Jersey Forest Fire Service said in a press conference.

It was no longer threatening populated areas, but a “soaking rainfall” is needed to stop the fire, officials said. The cause of the fire was under investigation.

Largest In 20 Years

The blaze could become the largest in New Jersey in about 20 years, said Shawn LaTourette, the state’s commissioner of environmental protection, at a press conference. A fire in May 2007 in the same area consumed 17,000 acres.

Embers from the fire sparked several small blazes near a decommissioned Oyster Creek nuclear power plant in Waretown, according to state officials. The plant, owned by Holtec International, shut down in 2018.

Lieutenant Governor Tahesha Way declared a state of emergency beginning at 7 a.m. on Wednesday. She was filling in for Governor Phil Murphy, who was on an overseas trip.

“At this time, we have no loss of life and no homes have been harmed,” Way said on X on Wednesday morning.


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New Jersey Wildfires

So far in 2025, New Jersey has experienced nearly twice as many wildfires as in the same period last year, with 662 wildfires burning over 16,500 acres. That compares with about 310 wildfires burning 315 acres in the first four months of 2024, Bill Donnelly, the chief of the forest fire service, said at the briefing.

On average, 1,500 wildfires damage or destroy 7,000 acres of the state’s forests each year, the New Jersey Forest Fire Service said on its website.

The blaze started on Tuesday in the Greenwood Forest Wildlife Management Area near Lacey, Ocean and Barnegat townships in Ocean County, about halfway between Asbury Park and Atlantic City. The area is about 15 miles (24 km) inland from the Atlantic Ocean shoreline.

Many Evacuated

About 1,300 homes were endangered, and between 3,000 and 5,000 people were under mandatory or voluntary evacuation orders, which were lifted on Wednesday morning. In addition, a 17-mile stretch of the Garden State Parkway, a major north-south highway, was closed on Tuesday but reopened on Wednesday morning

Hundreds of firefighters have been working on the blaze for almost 24 hours straight, Donnelly said.

To fully stop the fire, crews need a “soaking rainfall” which might come this weekend, said John Cecil with the state’s environmental protection department.

(With inputs from Reuters)