Global warming blamed for increased wildfire risk

Global warming blamed for increased wildfire risk

15 August 2008

published by deseretnews.com


USA — Global warming and past forest management are making forests in the western United States more susceptible to fire, while large wildfires, like two in Utah last year, are blamed for making climate change worse and putting unnatural stress on ecosystems, according to a report released Thursday.

In the National Wildlife Federation’s 2008 “Increased Risk of Catastrophic Wildfires: Global Warming’s Wake-Up Call for the Western United States,” the report claims global warming is increasing the risk of fires via rising temperatures, drier conditions, more lightning from stronger storms, added dry fuel for fires and a longer fire season.


A crop plane reseeds a burned area of the Milford Flat fire near Cove Fort. The fire scorched 363,000 acres in 2007.
Photo: Stuart JohnsonThose factors, combined with “decades of fire suppression that allowed unsafe fuel loads to accumulate, severe bark beetle infestations that are rapidly decimating trees, and ever expanding human settlements in and near forests, the result is increasing vulnerability to major fires,” the report states.

During a teleconference Thursday, National Wildlife Federation climate scientist Amanda Staudt said the number of wildfires has increased fourfold each year since the mid 1980s. Their impact on global warming is considered significant throughout the country and in Utah.

Last year’s 363,000-acre Milford Flat fire alone, for example, burned for about two weeks in July and is estimated to have released into the atmosphere more than 186,400 tons of carbon dioxide, or CO2, considered the most abundant of greenhouse gas emissions impacting climate change.

“I think CO2 emissions from fires are significant,” said Brock LeBaron, technical analysis manager for the Utah Division of Air Quality. “It’s something that needs to be considered in greenhouse gas emissions inventory as we go forward.”

Comparatively, the DAQ reported that in 2005, vehicles on Utah roads emitted about 15.1 million tons of CO2 (methane gases are factored into that amount) into the air throughout the state. There is a developing regional effort by members of the Western Climate Initiative who are calling for more regulation of carbon emitters, including industrial polluters.

Watchdogs say hotter and longer summers in the West aren’t helping matters.

University of Montana College of Forestry and Conservation’s Steven Running said during the teleconference how forests are starting their summer “dry down” early in the spring, melting away snow that he called “the best fire retardant ever invented.” He recalled a wildfire that burned near Billings last January. Summer rains throughout the West, however, are doing little to hydrate forest ecosystems, while areas that have burned don’t get enough water and come back as grasslands or landscapes defined by shrubs.

Missoula-based National Wildlife Federation regional executive director Tom France on Thursday said there needs to be more efforts to keep people from increasing the wildland-urban interface.

Tom France, a regional executive director of the National Wildlife Federation who is based in Missoula, Mont., said more efforts are needed to keep people from increasing the amount of urban land that borders wild areas.

“Unfortunately, many of our policymakers don’t seem to have taken that message to heart,” France said. “We need to be looking at new policies that look to reduce the human footprint in forest landscapes.”

More structures are being claimed by wildfires, according to Don Feser, disaster-preparedness coordinator for the San Bernardino (Calif.) City Fire Department. “It’s not just California that’s experiencing these problems; it’s throughout the western United States,” he said.

Among recent fires listed in the report, Utah’s 2007 Milford Flat fire burned 363,000 acres and cost $4 million to extinguish. Last year’s Neola fire, which was not mentioned in the report, burned more than 43,000 acres in Utah.

This year’s wildfire season in Utah has been comparatively mild so far. But in California, more than 1 million acres have burned this year, bringing $300 million in state-lands costs.

Although naturally occurring fires can be beneficial to forests and grasslands, the report said drought-fueled wildfires can “dramatically” alter habitat for fish and wildlife.

Forests absorb carbon dioxide, and in the 1990s, they removed one-third of the global-warming pollution released into the air during those 10 years, the report states. Catastrophic wildfires, however, release “tremendous” amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, requiring decades before enough forest can grow back and capture emissions again.

The National Wildlife Federation recommends jump-starting forest regrowth after catastrophic fires that leave areas susceptible to wind- and rain-driven erosion. The report also urges policymakers, industry leaders and individuals to take steps to reduce global-warming pollution from today’s levels by at least 2 percent each year and by 20 percent by 2020.

“Science tells us that this is the only way to hold warming to no more than 2 degrees Fahrenheit in the next century,” the report said.


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