President Donald Trump suggested global warming will reverse itself and dismissed climate change as a cause of the ferocious fires engulfing the west of the United States.

The 20 largest Californian wildfires in recent history
The 20 largest Californian wildfires in recent history AFP / Bertille LAGORCE

As the focus of the US election campaign switched to the deadly blazes, Democratic challenger Joe Biden slammed the incumbent as a "climate arsonist" and said America would not be safe from the ravages of a warming planet unless it elects "a president who respects science."

Infernos across California, Oregon and Washington state have burned more than five million acres (two million hectares) this year, killed dozens of people and forced hundreds of thousands from their homes.

A sign in front of a tent along the highway near Salem, Oregon on September 13, 2020 reads "Lost Everything Due To House Fire"
A sign in front of a tent along the highway near Salem, Oregon on September 13, 2020 reads "Lost Everything Due To House Fire" AFP / Robyn Beck

Whole towns have been ruined by the blazes, which have pumped out tonnes of noxious fumes that have hung in the air for days, blocking out the sun and making breathing difficult.

But Trump, in Sacramento on the third day of a re-election campaign swing, pushed back against state officials arguing that a heating climate underlies the ever-stronger fires.

Thick smoke from wildfires shrouds a highway between Portland and Mill City as blazes continue to burn in Oregon, destroying homes and killing multiple people this week.
Thick smoke from wildfires shrouds a highway between Portland and Mill City as blazes continue to burn in Oregon, destroying homes and killing multiple people this week. AFPTV / Eleonore SENS

"It will start getting cooler. You just watch," Trump said, offering no evidence for the theory.

"I wish science agreed with you," responded Wade Crowfoot, the head of the California Natural Resources Agency.

The Oak Park Motel's melted sign was destroyed in the Beachie Creek Fire in Gates, Oregon
The Oak Park Motel's melted sign was destroyed in the Beachie Creek Fire in Gates, Oregon POOL / Rob SCHUMACHER

"I don't think science knows, actually," Trump said.

Reputable scientists around the world are almost unanimous in their belief that the world is getting warmer because of human activity.

A man stands guard with a firearm outside his home after wildfires and heavy smoke caused many of his neighbors to evacuate the area, in Estacada, Oregon on September 12, 2020
A man stands guard with a firearm outside his home after wildfires and heavy smoke caused many of his neighbors to evacuate the area, in Estacada, Oregon on September 12, 2020 AFP / Robyn Beck

This man-made climate change amplifies droughts, which dry out regions, creating ideal conditions for wildfires to spread out-of-control and inflict unprecedented damage.

Trump also repeated his argument that wildfires are caused by poor maintenance of forest areas, making them more combustible.

Oregon wildfires are visible in this NASA photo obtained September 13, 2020
Oregon wildfires are visible in this NASA photo obtained September 13, 2020 NASA / Handout

"There has to be strong forest management," he said.

"With regard to the forests, when trees fall down after a short period of time, about 18 months, they become very dry. They become really like a match stick," he added. "They just explode."

The Bobcat Fire burns on a hillsides behind homes in Arcadia, California on September 13, 2020
The Bobcat Fire burns on a hillsides behind homes in Arcadia, California on September 13, 2020 AFP / Frederic J. BROWN

Biden, speaking at his own campaign event on the opposite coast, said Trump's re-election would be catastrophic for the environment.

"If you give a climate arsonist four more years in the White House, why would anyone be surprised if we have more of America ablaze?" Biden said, savaging Trump for failing to "take responsibility" for the ongoing wildfire crisis.

A barn is shrouded in smoke on September 13, 2020 in Molalla, Oregon, which has been evacuated due to the Riverside Fire
A barn is shrouded in smoke on September 13, 2020 in Molalla, Oregon, which has been evacuated due to the Riverside Fire AFP / Robyn Beck

"We need a president who respects science, who understands that the damage from climate change is already here."

California Governor Gavin Newsom, who has argued that the fires are driven mostly by global warming, acknowledged as he met with Trump that better forest management was needed, but insisted the overwhelming cause of the problem is far bigger.

"We submit the science is in and observed evidence is self-evident: that climate change is real and that is exacerbating this," he said.

Much of the West Coast has been blanketed in choking smog for days, with Portland on Monday the world's most air-polluted city according to IQAir.

Washington state Governor Jay Inslee said it was crucial voters elect a "climate president" come November 3.

"This moment requires action, not denial," he said in a tweet. "We must come together around science to build a better future for all Americans."

Most of the 35 deaths so far confirmed have occurred in California and Oregon, where the wildfires are the worst in decades and have been fueled partly by record heat.

More than 30,000 firefighters are battling the blazes, with wind gusts and drier weather on Monday threatening more destruction.

Residents of Arcadia, on the outskirts of Los Angeles, were ordered to evacuate Sunday as the nearby Bobcat Fire spread south through forested terrain toward the metropolis.

Two new deaths were confirmed from the North Complex Fire, which swept at unprecedented speeds last week into areas already ravaged less than two years ago by the Camp Fire -- California's deadliest ever blaze.

"There are still active fires, power lines are down, trees are down, there are roads that are impassable," said Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea, warning evacuees it could take "weeks and weeks" to return to their homes.

He said seven people remained missing.

"When I came around the bend, everything was on fire -- an entire hillside. So I ended up driving through and you couldn't see 50 feet (15 meters)."

"It was worse than the Camp Fire, which I didn't think was possible."