Almost everywhere on the planet where combustible green cover exists, wildfires are becoming a bigger risk, new research has found. Fire seasons on an average are almost 20 percent longer today than they were 35 years ago, a published in says. Areas where combustible vegetation grows that are at risk from wildfires have doubled in this time period.
The study echoes what the Forest Service has been saying for many years now. Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell in a Senate hearing in 2013 cited a lengthening fire season as one of the challenges for suppression efforts. The press release this year reiterated that at the national and global levels, we are witnessing “heightened levels of wildfire activity.”
The new study noted that every year from 1979 to 2013, on average, about 865 million acres of land all over the world was affected by wildfires.
There are many factors that lead to wildfires, the major ones being the presence of fuels, a source of ignition and conducive weather conditions. “Of the three factors, weather is the most variable and largest driver of regional burned area,” Jolly said. “So we separated weather from the other driving factors in order to isolate the impacts of climate change on wildland fire potential.”
Field said he was surprised by the magnitude of the change captured by the study. “An average 18 percent increase in the fire season, that is a big effect,” he said. “It is a reminder that many parts of the Earth’s system are extremely sensitive to modest changes in the environmental conditions.”
Growing fire activity means growing costs
The current study does not elaborate on the ways in which climate change could be leading to a protracted fire season, and Jolly said this would be an area for further research.
But one reason to be worried, Field pointed out, is that the forests hold a large amount of carbon. There is concern in the scientific community that forest fires may set in motion a vicious cycle, where the burning of forests releases more carbon into the atmosphere, thus aggravating the effects of climate change.
Over the past decade, the United States has spent $1.7 billion on wildfire suppression, the study noted. In 2014, the Forest Service exceeded the budget for wildfire suppression by approximately $200 million. The total suppression costs for this year are likely to be around $1.225 billion.
“Over the past few decades, wildfire suppression costs have increased as fire seasons have grown longer and the frequency, size, and severity of wildfires has increased,” Jones said. “Funding has not kept pace with the cost of fighting fire.”
Every fiscal year since 2002, barring two, the agency has exceeded its budget, and on seven occasions, it has been forced to transfer funds from its other programs.
“Transferring funds to cover the cost of wildfire suppression is disruptive and harmful to other critical Forest Service programs and services,” Jones said. But even as the United States musters resources to fight its fiery battles, it is reaching out to Canada, which is experiencing an even more strenuous fire season. Five crews and 30 personnel have already been dispatched across the border to assist with fire suppression efforts there.
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