Canada’s ongoing wildfire
season is a harbinger of our climate future, experts and officials say. The
fires are a “really clear sign of climate change”, said Mohammadreza Alizadeh,
a researcher at McGill University in Montreal, who is also a postdoctoral
associate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Research shows that climate
change has already exacerbated wildfires dramatically. A 2021 study supported
by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association found that climate change
has been the main driver of the increase in hot, dry fire weather in the
western US.
By 2090, global
wildfires are expected to increase in intensity by up to 57% thanks to climate
change, a United Nations report warned
last year. Canada is on track to experience its most severe wildfire
season on record, national officials said this week. It’s part of a
trend experts say will intensify as climate change makes hotter, drier weather
and longer fire seasons more common.
The country has already seen 1,400% of the normal
amount of land burned for this time of year. More than 400 blazes were burning across Canada on
Wednesday, following an unprecedentedly intense beginning to the fire season.
Hot and dry conditions are expected to persist through to the end of the
season.
Scientists have
not linked this summer’s fires to climate change, but experts and officials say
global warming will exacerbate Canadian wildfires in general.
By the end of the
century, climate change could double the acreage burned by wildfires each year,
according to Canada’s natural
resources agency. That could take a heavy toll on human safety,
ecosystems and air quality, while threatening timber supply.
Multiple
climate-linked factors exacerbated this year’s fires, said Alizadeh. Dry conditions
left vegetation parched and created tinderbox-like conditions. The hot air
itself made it easier for fires to spark. And more frequent lightning – which
strikes more frequently during hot weather – increased chances of blazes
igniting in the forest.
Both the intensity
and wide distribution of this year’s blazes have stunned officials. Fires are
burning in nearly every province and territory in Canada.
“The distribution
of fires from coast to coast this year is unusual. At this time of the year,
fires usually occur only on one side of the country at a time, most often that
being in the west,” Michael Norton, an official with Canada’s Natural Resources
ministry, told Reuters.
Daniel Swain, a
climate scientist at the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability at the
University of California, Los Angeles, said that research shows there has
already been a climate change-linked uptick in fire weather in eastern Canada.
“There’s a clear climate connection there,” he said.
In eastern Canada,
where fires are also blazing, there hasn’t been as much of demonstrable link to
climate change historically, but that may be starting to shift, he said.
The fires have
forced tens of thousands of people to evacuate their homes since May, and
created smoke that
has degraded air quality hundreds of miles away in the United States. Marshall
Burke, associate professor of Earth System Science at Stanford University, said
New York City’s smoke event this week is bigger in scale than anything seen in
the last two decades.
“Current wildfire smoke event
in NYC is off the charts relative to anything in past two decades,” he said.
“Last two days are remarkable.”
The Canadian blazes come two years after an unprecedented fire season in the country, when a wildfire destroyed an entire village the day after the nation broke its highest record temperature.
Greenpeace Canada noted with
disbelief on Twitter that 7 June marks Canada’s Clean Air Day, while officials
said the fires were a warning about climate change. “The ongoing wildfires
remind us that carbon pollution carries a cost on our society, as it
accelerates climate change,” Steven Guilbeault, Canada’s minister of
environment and climate change, tweeted on
Wednesday.
Some US politicians made that
link as well. “Climate change makes wildfires more frequent and widespread. If
we do nothing, this is our new reality,” tweeted Senator
Bernie Sanders. “It’s time to act.”
Representative Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez echoed the sentiment. “We must adapt our food systems, energy
grids, infrastructure, healthcare, etc ASAP to prepare for what’s to come and
catch up to what is already here,” she tweeted.
The fires and
resulting air quality emergencies come as global officials are gathered at the
Bonn Climate Change Conference in Germany to assess progress on climate action
and look ahead to the Cop28 United Nations climate talks.
“If US President
Biden, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and the UN Climate Conference
leaders need a reminder to take bold action on climate, the out of control
Canadian wildfires and consequent smoke pollution should be all they need,”
Allie Rosenbluth, US Program co-manager at the advocacy group Oil Change
International said in an emailed statement.
Unfortunately, the
fires in Canada won’t burn out any time soon, said Swain, because many of the
fires are scorching through dense boreal forests. “The volume of burnable
organic material is extremely high in these places,” he said.
Right now, unusually strong
north-to-south winds mean the the smoke is “making a beeline from these
unusually intense and large fires in Canada, directly down to New York”, he
said.
As wind patterns
shift, Swain said, the US east coast could see a reprieve from smoke-filled skies.
But as the fires continue to blaze through the rest of the summer, he said the
smoke would probably be back over the region before long.
“This could be an episodic problem in places like New York and New England for weeks or months,” he said. “It won’t be this smoky the whole time. But this is probably not going to completely go away.”
-The Guardian
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