A teenager who admitted to starting a massive blaze in the wilderness of Oregon was ordered to pay more than $36 million to those affected by the fire, a report said Monday.

A judge in Hood River, Oregon, made the decision after reviewing the constitutionality of imposing such a hefty fine on a minor — which he admitted the youth would have to pay over time, according to The Oregonian.

“In short, I’m satisfied that the restitution ordered in this case bears a sufficient relationship to the gravity of the offenses for which the youth was adjudicated,” Judge John A. Olson said in a memo setting the restitution.

He also wrote that the $36 million “is clearly proportionate to the offense because it does not exceed the financial damages caused by the youth.”

A lawyer for the 15-year-old called the amount “absurd” and “absolutely silly.”

Some of funds imposed would be distributed as such: $21 million for the US Forest Service, $12.5 million for the Oregon Department of Transportation, $1 million for the Oregon State Fire Marshal and another $1 million to the Union Pacific Railroad.