Showing posts with label wildfire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wildfire. Show all posts

Evidence Linking Wildfires and Climate Change

A hotter world is also a drier world. Less precipitation in the form of rain and snow. Warmer temperatures also contribute to earlier snowmelt and more evaporation. Climate change also augurs infect infestations that kill trees and provide more fuel for wildfires. Increasingly severe storms also contribute to more lightening and this is yet another wildfire risk factor associated with climate change. Here is a brief primer reviewing some of the evidence linking wildfires to climate change.

Wildfires have always occurred in nature but human activities have caused the Earth to warm and this is increasing the number and intensity of fires. The world has warmed by an average of one degree Celsius since pre-industrial times, however, in some forests the temperature has increased by 1.5 degrees Celsius.

As reported by Yale Climate Connection, Hotter drier conditions have almost doubled the number of wildfires in the West and big wildfires are 5 times more common in the West now than in the '70s. Forty years ago there was an average of 20 large fires each year in the West, now we are averaging well over 100 large fires each year. The fire season has expanded by almost 50 percent and is now two-and-a-half months longer than it was 40 years ago.

In 2014 the National Climate Assessment study contributed to the growing body of research that corroborated the view that climate change is increasing wildfire risk. Average annual temperatures worldwide have increased by 1.9 degrees Fahrenheit in the last decade. Winter snow packs melt up to 4 weeks earlier than in previous decades, leaving landscapes drier and making it easier for wildfires to spread when they start.

The most conclusive evidence yet comes from a study titled, "Impact of anthropogenic climate change on wildfire across western US forests". While preceeding studies have said that there is a clear hypothesized link between wildfires and climate changes this study observes and quantifies the evidence for attribution. According to this research human-caused, climate change has doubled the amount of wildfires. This translates to the burning of an additional 10.4 million acres of wildfires between 1984 and 2015.

This study by John T. Abatzogloua and A. Park Williams explicitly makes the connection. Abatzoglou claimed that his research found that anthropogenic climate change played a prominent role in forest fire activity in the western United States. "We’re no longer waiting for human-caused climate change to leave its fingerprint on wildfire across the western U.S. It’s already here," Abatzoglou said in his report.

In the "Years of Living Dangerously", Randy Anderson, a longtime firefighter, and superintendent of the Snake River Hotshots said, "You can’t deny the fact that it’s getting warmer and drier. And we’re seeing it in the effects of the wildland fires." Big fires are getting bigger. Anderson explained that when he first started fighting forest fires in 1987 he was battling fires in excess of 20,000 acres. Now we are seeing fires as big as 400,000-acres fires.” He cautions that Western wildfires continue to worsen as the Earth keeps warming.

"No matter how hard we try, the fires are going to keep getting bigger, and the reason is really clear. Climate is really running the show in terms of what burns. We should be getting ready for bigger fire years than those familiar to previous generations," Professor Williams said. "I'd expect increases to proceed exponentially for at least the next few decades."

Climate Central reports:
"Climate change is making wildfire seasons longer and more intense. The trend bends toward bigger, more destructive and drought-driven blazes in the West. On average, wildfires burn six times the acreage they did 45 years ago, Since the 1970s, the frequency of wildfire has increased 1,000 percent in the Pacific Northwest, 889 percent in the Northern Rockies, 462 percent in the Southwest and 256 percent in California’s Sierra Nevada as the mountain snowpack melts earlier and the fire season lengthens, according to Schoennagel’s team’s research. In the northern latitudes, the boreal forest is burning at a rate unprecedented rate. Wildfire season arrives a month earlier than it did in 1970. In Alaska, the number of big wildfires has doubled in the last 65 years".

The lead author of another wildfire study said, "wildfires are increasing beyond our capacity to control, especially with more people in fire’s way." Tania Schoennagel, a research scientist at the University of Colorado-Boulder’s Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research. "As wildfires continue to increase, more and more communities are threatened, and suppression simply will not be able to keep up," Schoennagel said. "Through suppression, we’ve tried to make fire adapt to us, but going forward, we will have to adapt to it...The first step is to expect that wildfire will come to your door rather than assume it will not."

"The public needs to become aware that fire is a natural process and that increases in the frequency and size of large fires are inevitable," Williams said.

To make matters worse there is a dangerous feedback loop between wildfires and climate change. Not only are wildfires exacerbated by climate change they are also a contributing factor. Wildfires release large amounts of carbon dioxide and decrease the number of trees available to absorb it,

Prescribed burns and thinning can help but the real solution is to slow temperature rises and this means weaning ourselves off of fossil fuels. Will Ashley-Cantello, chief adviser on forests at WWF-UK, said the research underlined the need to stop using fossil fuels and cutting down forests. "We must reduce our climate warming emissions worldwide and mimic natural processes in the way we manage forests. The age of fossil fuels and deforestation has to end now."

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California Fires are Part of a Global Phenomenon

The devastating fires in California are but the most dramatic example of a phenomenon that has ravaged many parts of the world in 2017.  At least 30 people have been killed by the fires in northern California and thousands are missing. Tens of thousands of others have either lost their homes or been forced to flee. Propelled by strong winds fires have destroyed almost 200,000 acres of land in California including ranches and businesses. Sonoma County and Mendocino County have been hit particularly hard and Redwood Valley has been reduced to ashes.

This news report from Saturday October 14th provides a good overview of the issues and challenges in California. More than 8000 firefighters are combating ongoing wildfires in the Golden State and a record amount of fire retardants have been dumped on these record setting fires.



Health impacts

The fine particles from wildfires have been linked to respiratory problems like asthma, heart attacks, and even cardiac arrest. Wildfires release nitrogen oxide and hydrocarbons that contribute to elevated ozone levels. Breathing ozone can trigger a variety of negative health effects and can also worsen symptoms of bronchitis, emphysema, and asthma.

Economic impacts

Even before the latest round of California wildfires started the costs associated with combating fires in the US were already over $2.4 billion. These statistics are tracked by the US Forest Service and they report that this represents a substantial increase. This year has already exceeded the record set in 2015 when $1.7 billion was spent on fire suppression efforts. Once the California fires are tallied the cost of fire suppression in the US is expected to double. However, this is a small fraction of the overall cost of the damage caused. Dr. Joel N. Myers, founder, president and chairman of AccuWeather said that the California fires alone are expected to represent a staggering $85 - $100 billion hit to the national economy.

 Number and size of US fires

Wildfires are getting bigger and burning hotter. The California fires of 2017 are record-setting but so are fires across the US. As of Friday, October 13 there were 22 large fires burning in California and a total of 41 large blazes burning out of control in the West. According to the National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC), as of October 13 more than 51,000 fires have scorched over 8.5 million acres of the U.S. so far in 2017. This represents a 50 percent increase over the average for this time of year. More fires are anticipated in the US until at least the end of October.

Trump's abdication

Sadly these fires come at a time when the Trump administration is working to gut the budgets of the agencies that provide valuable data to control these fires. Under Trump's proposed budget the nation’s six Regional Climate Centers (RCCs) would be cut by 82%, from $3.65 million to $650,000.  Even before the most recent federal elections Republicans have been reticent to support efforts to fight wildfires.

Global phenomenon

The US is not alone, wildfires are becoming increasingly common all around the world. As explained by Kendra Pierre-Louis on August 4, spikes in the 2017 fire season is a global phenomenon. In recent years fires have burned large swaths of Canada, the Amazon and Indonesia. In 2017 the trend has intensified with major fire in Canada, Romania, Portugal, Russia, Brazil, South Africa and New Zealand have all experienced significant wildfires. Chile.

There are a number of wildfires burning in Canada including in the province of B.C. which is experiencing one of its worst fire seasons on record. Wildfires are also burning in the Europe especially in Italy and Romania. In June a European heatwave dubbed "Lucifer" contributed to wildfires that killed 60 people in Portugal. In July There was the forest fire in Montana's Bitterroot mountains that burned thousands of acres and destroyed almost a hundred homes. There was also the Cherry Valley fire in southern California and wildfires in southern France.

Bizarre locations

Wildfires are also burning in bizarre locations. For example Ireland experienced a 75 percent reduction in rainfall and this contributed to unprecedented wildfires. Greenpeace reports that a huge wildfire was observed in Greenland just 150 km away from the Arctic Circle and 50 km away from Greenland's ice sheet. This prompted local authorities to say that nobody has "seen anything like this in recent time".

"As our climate is changing we see wildfires where they never happened before, or with higher intensity," Greenpeace Russia's Anton Beneslavskiy said. "This trend is going to get worse as wildfires themselves drive climate change with CO2 and black carbon emissions creating a positive feedback loop. This is a sign we are entering a new era, where a new, environmental approach to wildfires is needed".

Climate change

In Russia, North America and California in particular wildfires are closely associated with climate change. The increases in wildfires around the world in 2017 is entirely consistent with predictions associated with climate change modeling. As explained in a Cleantecnica article by James Ayre these fires are a product of a warming world.

As the climate warms there is more evaporation and these drier conditions are conducive to wildfires. Warmer temperatures also mean less snowfall and quicker melting of the snow. There are also other factors caused by warmer temperatures including dead trees caused by insects.  As Ayers said,  "massive wildfires will become more and more widespread and recurrent."

This story was updated on October 19, 2017.

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Climate Change Fueling Wildfires in North America and Russia

Wildfires fueled by record heat have ravaged areas across North America and Russia this year. This year is very much like last year. However, the western fires of 2015, were not as widespread and they came later than they did this year. 

There is strong evidence that global warming has lengthened wildfire seasons. This research is corroborated by recent observations in North America and Russia. Across the continent warm temperatures are melting snowpacks, exacerbating droughts and contributing to the number and size of wildfires. Heat is an important catalyst for forest fires and temperatures continue to soar. Even before the start of summer Phoenix hit a sweltering 127 degree F [or 53 C]. Heat records are being broken in many states and in parts of Southern California temperatures exceeded 120 degrees Fahrenheit (50 degrees Celsius).

In California a number of fires are raging including one in the Santa Barbara region which has burned almost 10,000 acres. Near Albuquerque, New Mexico a total of more than 20,000 acres have burned and north of Phoenix a fire has consumed more than 26,000 acres. A number of other fires are also burning in Utah and Nevada.

Canada is also contending with a slew of forest fires. In May there was the massive Fort McMurray fire in Alberta. A number of forest fires are also destroying vast swaths of land in Quebec and Ontario. The city of Greenstone North of Thunder Bay declared a state of emergency and was preparing for a Fort McMurray style evacuation. In Nova Scotia hot temperatures have put most of the province at very very high risk. There are fires burning in North Preston and in Halifax.

The Guardian reports that a large number of forest fires are also burning in Russia. Although official estimates state that 669,000 hectares have succumbed to wildfires so far in 2016. However, a Greenpeace analysis of satellite data reveals that 3.5m hectares have burned this year. To put these numbers into perspective, the massive forest fires around Fort McMurray in May, destroyed around 580,000 hectares.

"WWF forestry expert Alexander Bryukhanov said under-reporting meant that the annual extent of forest fires in the US and Canada are regularly double that in Russia, which has twice as much forest."

The fact that the Russian government hides the real data on forest fires suggests that they are reluctant to admit to the growth in fires for fear that people will call for climate action.

In Russia there is also a connection between heat and wildfires. The frequency of Russian forest fires there has increased 30-50 percent in the last 20-30 years. The Russian heatwave of 2010, which cost the nation $15 billion, was made three times more likely by climate change.

According to one study climate change will cause the cost of combating wildfires to exceed $62 billion annually by 2050.

Forest fires are not only destructive and costly, they are directly responsible for respiratory illnesses and deaths.

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Climate Change Fueling Forest Fires in the North American West

In North America the summer of 2015 has just gotten underway and already fires are raging across vast swaths of the continent. Forest fires are burning across the Canadian west and Alaska. These fires are getting worse and they are increasingly being attributed to climate change. Tens of thousands of people have had to be evacuated. In the sparsely populated province of Saskatchewan alone 13,000 people had to be moved, making this the largest such evacuation in the province's history.

These forest fires are creating massive amounts of smoke that have blanketed much of the continent. The toxic smoke has taken a toll on air quality prompting warnings in many places across North America.

"Wildfire smoke can pose serious health risks to people hundreds of miles away from the sources of fires," said Kim Knowlton, a senior scientist with NRDC. "Wildfire smoke already clouds the skies of millions of Americans and because climate change will fuel more wildfires, that danger will rise." 

Alaska recorded its warmest year on record last year and the state is warming twice as fast as other states.
A 2013 PNAS study which examined lake sediments in Alaska found that the number of forest fires has increasing. A 2015 report from Climate Central found that Alaska's fire season is last 40 percent longer than 50 years ago.

Alaska is not the only place where forest fires on on the increase, thousands of wildfires have burned across Canada in 2015. According to John Innes, the dean of UBC's faculty of forestry, these fires are attributable at least in part to climate change and he went on to say the situation is likely to become far worse a few decades from now.

There are a number of dangerous feedback loops involving forest fires and climate change. The fires not bleed carbon into the atmosphere, the forests that are lost eliminate important carbon sinks. There are also other more complex feedback loops between forest fires and climate change.

One of the most dramatic impacts from these fires involves the loss of permafrost in northern Canada and Alaska. There is an estimated 1.4 trillion tons of carbon in the world's permafrost. That is twice the amount currently in the atmosphere. If the carbon locked in the permafrost were to be released it would drive runaway climate change. Another permafrost feedback loop of concern involves Arctic warming and algae blooms.

A recent Canadian Wildland Fire Information System (CWFIS) report reads, “fire activity has increased dramatically and is now well above average for this time of year.”

One of the worst hit areas is British Columbia where hundreds of wildfires are burning across the province. In 2014 BC recorded its third worst forest fire season in the province's history. A draft report released last year by the Wildfire Management Branch said these large fires are expected to increase as climate change progresses. The report says climate change will mean "an ever growing wildfire risk and threat to communities, critical infrastructure and natural values in British Columbia."

The Edmonston Sun reported that that there are some 1,200 fires that have burned almost three quarters of a million acres in Alberta since April 1.

The CBC reported that fires in Saskatchewan are “unprecedented” for the region, noting that the area currently burning is about 10 times the average. Some are predicting that many of the fires in Saskatchewan will burn until the fall.

As explained by Innes, "longer term, we will see more fires. We will see the fire season extending, it will start earlier, it will go on later, and the fires that we get will be more intense."

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The Dangerous Feedback Loop Between Wildfires and Climate Change

In North America, wildfires are destroying vast swaths of forest and creating massive plumes of smoke which extend across the continent and all the way to the Mid-Atlantic.

In Canada, there are huge fires raging in B.C., the Northwest Territories, and Ontario. As of August 6, a total of 3,840 wildfires have destroyed over 3,508,582 million acres so far this year. As of August 12 there were a total of 41 large wildfires burning in the U.S. Ten in California, ten in Washington and ten in Oregon. A total of eight fires are burning in Idaho and three in Montana. The land mass impacted by these fires totals 714,044 acres.

As revealed by a Climate Central analysis, wildfires are on the increase. Their examination of 42 years of U.S. Forest Service records for 11 Western states shows that there are now 7 times more fires greater than 10,000 acres each year and nearly 5 times more fires larger than 25,000 acres each year. There are also twice as many fires over 1,000 acres each year, with an average of more than 100 per year from 2002 through 2011, compared with less than 50 during the 1970’s. On average, wildfires burn twice as much land area each year as they did 4 decades ago.

The price tag for U.S. wildfires this year is around $1.4 billion, which is 40 percent more than the amount of money budgeted. 

Pollution

The costs of wildfires are not only material, they also produce smoke which can harm and even kill. Wildfires produce “fine particle” air pollution, which is a direct threat to human health even during relatively short exposures. The fine particulates in wildfire smoke can penetrate deep into the lungs, increasing the mortality risk and health problems. This risk is particularly pronounced for those who have respiratory illnesses, heart conditions and the elderly. 

One study showed that the air quality from wildfires is worse than air pollution levels in Beijing. According to the study, wildfires burning within 50-100 miles of a city routinely caused air quality to be 5 to 15 times worse than normal, and often 2-3 times worse than the worst non-fire day of the year.

In North America, high smoke particle concentrations have compromised air quality in parts of the northern Rockies, the Great Lakes and the Northeast. Last year Grants Pass, Oregon recorded one of the worst examples of poor air quality attributable to wildfire. For nine days last summer, Grants Pass had air quality so poor that it was unhealthy for anyone to be outside. On five of those days, fine particle pollution was literally off the charts — higher than the local air quality meter could read. 

Smoke from wildfires can travel great distances. It is often pushed into the stratosphere by the heat from fires. Smoke from Canada's wildfires has even crossed the Atlantic and made its way to Europe.

Climate change

The relationship between wildfires and climate change was made recently by President Obama's Science Adviser John Holdren. The day after wildfires prompted California Governor Jerry Brown to declare a state of national emergency and mobilize the national guard, Holdren pointed out that the situation is getting worse. He explained that the length of U.S. fire seasons has expanded by 60 to 80 days since the 1980s, and the amount of acres consumed by wildfires each year has doubled to more than seven million.

Heat and drought

Hotter springs and summers make the fire season last longer. Hotter, dryer weather produces more fuel for these fires which feed on a mix of desiccated kindling. Heat dries out dead vegetation on the forest floor which increases the number of fires and causes more energetic fires. Climate change also increases the incidence and intensity of wildfires through reduced levels of snowpack, and earlier snow melt. 

In California, a state being devastated by a three year drought, at least 3,600 fires have burned about 63 square miles so far this summer. In 2013, there were a total of 3,000 fires in the state. The five-year average for this time of year is about 2,500 fires and 54 square miles burned. 

The Northwest Territories may ring the Arctic, but even here, high temperatures are fueling wildfires. The hottest and driest weather in half a century has caused the worst fire season ever in the Territories.

We are already experiencing warmer temperatures, and as explained in the IPCC 4th Assessment Report, summer temperatures in western North America could increase between 3.6 F and 9 F by the middle of this century.

As the planet continues to warm, wildfires will increase in intensity and size. The combination of high temperatures and low precipitation could drive a six-fold increase in wildfires over the next 2 decades.


Lightening

Fires are often caused by lightning strikes which are expected to increase as the planet warms. Research suggests that climate change causes more intense thunderstorms and more lightening. 

A study examining the impact of climate change on the world's lightning and thunderstorm patterns found that for every one degree Celsius of long-term warming, there will be a near 10 percent increase in lightning activity. 

As explained by the study's lead author, Professor Colin Price, head of the Department of Geophysics, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences at Tel Aviv University in Israel, while there may be somewhat less thunderstorms, the data shows that these storms have "fifty percent more lightning activity."

Feedback loops

Climate change causes fires which emit carbon, which in turn exacerbates global warming. This feedback loop is especially pronounced in boreal forests because they are commonly located on top of peat. When peat is burned it releases far more carbon than non-peat fires, this accelerates global warming and sets the stage for more fires.

A 2010 study illustrates why wildfires in boreal forests are particularly worrisome. As explained by the study's lead author, University of Guelph professor Merritt Turetsky, "half the world’s soil carbon is locked in northern permafrost and peatland soils. This is carbon that has accumulated in ecosystems a little bit at a time for thousands of years, but is being released very rapidly through increased burning." 

The wildfires ravaging the Northwest Territories are expected to destroy between one and two million hectares of boreal forest this year alone. Last year, the province of Quebec lost 1.7 million hectares to fire. To put this in context, the relatively small Anaktuvuk river fire in 2007 was found to have released 2.1 million metric tons of carbon into the atmosphere. Larger, deeper burning fires could release much larger quantities of carbon.

"Essentially this could represent a runaway climate change scenario in which warming is leading to larger and more intense fires, releasing more greenhouse gases and resulting in more warming," Turetsky said.

Put simply, wildfires are not only caused by climate change, they also add to it. The widespread burning of boreal forests in particular could represent a tipping point from which we may not be able to recover. 

Source: Global Warming is Real

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Wildfires Peat and Carbon

Boreal forests and Arctic tundras contain peat which stores carbon that is released when it burns. This is one of the worst years ever for wildfires in Canada's boreal forests. Up to two million hectares of boreal forests are expected to burn in the Northwest Territories alone this year.

The relationship between heat and wildfires around the Arctic is complex. Some areas like western Siberia are not experiencing the abnormal heat that we see in the Northwest Territories. Scientists, including those at NASA attribute this to the looping waves of the jet stream the facilitate the persistence of ridges of dry air in some locations while moisture-laden troughs linger in others.

In boreal forests some species of trees can be entirely eradicated by fire and never return. Permafrost is another casualty of big fires. When permafrost melts away under a fire, it makes it harder for some species of trees to repopulate in the burned out area.

One of the most destructive elements of fires involves a dangerous feedback loop. Boreal forests are commonly situated on peatlands which have huge carbon stores that are released when burned. Vast amounts of carbon are locked in boreal forests and the northern tundras. Roughly half of the world's soil contains peat.

According to University of Guelph professor Merritt Turetsky, the burning of forests containing peat, "could represent a runaway climate change scenario in which warming is leading to larger and more intense fires, releasing more greenhouse gases and resulting in more warming."

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Global Fire Map (May 1 - 10, 2014)

The Rim Fire: More Evidence of Climate Change

The Rim fire currently engulfing California is the latest example of increasingly destructive wildfires caused by climate change. In the Southern Yosemite area alone there have already been four large fires this summer.

According to Matthew Hurteau, assistant professor of forest resources at Penn State University, warming temperatures, prolonged drought, and a century’s worth of fire suppression policy are “priming the system to make it more flammable.”

California has experienced its driest year in modern history with record-low 4.58 inches of precipitation during the period from January to June 2013. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration that is nearly 10 inches below average. A major heat wave in July also added to the dryness of the soil.

Climate change is making wildfires more frequent and more intense. Fires are a natural part of the forest ecology, but climate change is changing the balance and making fires more frequent, more pervasive and more destructive.

The Rim Fire has burned 160,000 acres with about 22,000 of those acres in Yosemite. It is harder for animal and plant species to adapt to this new brand of climate change induced fire. There are a number of plant and animal species under threat, including the iconic giant sequoias. Although sequoias are normally able to withstand forest fires, this hotter type of fire poses a real risk, so much so that sprinkler systems have been set up around some of the giant trees.

Other threatened species include mountain yellow-legged frog, and the rare and endangered Yosemite great gray owl. Dozens of homes have burned down and the fire threatens water and power sources for San Francisco.

The rim fire is yet another example of fires caused by global warming. According to NIFC data, there are more large fires (greater than 10,000 acres) burning now than at any time in the past 40 years, and the total area burned each year has also increased. The top eight worst wildfire years since 1960, in terms of acres burned, have all occurred since 2000.

For more information on the link between forest fires and climate change click here.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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