A wildfire ripping through Northern California’s wine country has more than tripled in size, forcing thousands of evacuations and endangering properties in a region devastated by blazes just three years ago. The Glass Fire north of San Francisco reached more than 36,000 acres as of Monday evening, up from 11,000 acres in the morning, and is 0% contained, according to a briefing by officials in Sonoma County. A second fire that erupted over the weekend in Shasta County is also raging and has killed at least three people.

More than 68,000 people are under evacuation orders in Sonoma County, according to the sheriff’s office. Governor Gavin Newsom urged people to heed warnings and leave immediately when authorities sound the alarm.

“So many of the people that have lost their lives were just cautious in terms of taking seriously those orders,” Newsom said in a media briefing Monday. “We really, really cannot say it enough. Please heed local law enforcement. Please listen to them when they raise that alarm bell.”

California has been battered for weeks by rounds of extreme weather that state officials say have been fueled by climate change. Last month, a record-breaking heatwave triggered the state’s first rotating power outages since the 2001 energy crisis — and was followed just three weeks later by another one. More than 8,000 wildfires have burned a record 3.7 million acres this year, choking cities with smoke, killing at least 26 people and destroying more than 7,000 structures.

On Monday, more than 18,000 firefighters were battling 27 major blazes across the state.

Shares of PG&E — which went bankrupt last year after its equipment ignited catastrophic fires — fell 5.5% Monday, the most in three months. The company told its employees that it has no information indicating that its equipment was involved in the start of either the Glass Fire or the Zogg Fire in Shasta County, according to an internal memo obtained by Bloomberg News.

The causes of the blazes remain under investigation.

The Glass Fire broke out early Sunday and was raging northeast of Santa Rosa, the area devastated by the 2017 Tubbs Fire, among the most destructive in California history. Properties damaged in the famed vineyard region included the Chateau Boswell estate, the Meadowood resort and the Castello di Amorosa winery, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

About 180 miles north, the Zogg Fire burned at least 15,000 acres, prompting more evacuations.

While Northern California’s weather conditions are expected to improve, Newsom warned that strong offshore winds could develop overnight to the south. He said state officials are dispatching firefighters there in case blazes break out.