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CLIMATE CHANGE-US: Wildfires Rekindle Global Warming Debate By Adrianne Appel* BOSTON, Dec 21 (IPS/IFEJ) - The massive wildfires that roared and twisted their way through southern
California in 2007 are a glimpse of what a future of global warming may hold,
scientists say.
The western U.S. can expect to see more "mega forest fires" of over 100,000
acres due to an increase in greenhouse gases, says Thomas Swetnam,
director of the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research at The University of Arizona
in Tucson.
"Lots of people think climate change and the ecological responses are 50 to
100 years away. But it's not 50 to 100 years away - it's happening now in
forest ecosystems through fire," Swetnam said.
Since the mid-1980s - as spring temperatures increased, mountain snows
melted earlier and summers grew hotter - the number of forest fires in the
Western U.S. and acreage burned have increased, Swetnam said.
"I see this as one of the first big indicators of climate change impacts in the
continental United States," said Swetnam. More research is needed on the
Southern California ecosystem, with its chaparral and forests, and climate
change, he said.
About 500,000 acres of chaparral, forests, and residential neighbourhoods
outside of Los Angeles and San Diego are now nothing more than empty
tracts of charcoal remains as a result of 16 fires that began Oct. 21 and ended
Nov. 9.
A 20-acre fire destroyed five homes in the ultra-wealthy Malibu, outside Los
Angeles in January and then another very large fire burned in the same area
from Nov. 24 to Nov. 27 destroying over 50 homes. In May, more than 800
acres burned in Los Angeles’ Griffith Park and more than 4,700 acres burned
on Santa Catalina Island. In June, hundreds of homes were destroyed or
damaged in wildfire at Lake Tahoe.
In total, tens of thousands of people were evacuated and upwards of 9,000
firefighters were summoned to battle the flames.
Lately, some rain has been falling in Southern California and flash flood
warnings have been in effect. Authorities fear mudslides may occur because
of the loss of vegetation.
The Southern California region is naturally prone to fires but unlike centuries
past, it is now heavily populated with millions of homes.
The climate in Southern California this year was different than normal, and
created ideal conditions for fires, experts say.
This year’s conditions mirrored those of 2003, when drought conditions and
Santa Ana winds helped fuel fires that burned 750,000 acres in Southern
California.
It is impossible to draw sound conclusions about climate change from one or
two events, like the California wildfires, said Ronald Neilson, a professor at
Oregon State University and a contributor to publications of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. But the fires and recent weather
patterns match Nielson’s predictions that Southern California will heat up
over the next century, provoking periods of unbroken drought and stretches
of heavy rain.
"This is exactly what we’ve been projecting to happen, both in short-term fire
forecasts for this year and the longer term patterns that can be linked to
global climate change," said Neilson, who also serves as a bioclimatologist
with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service.
Southern California has been in the midst of a harsh drought. Just 3.21
inches of rain fell in the year ending Jun. 30, 2007, the lowest level since
1877. The average annual rainfall is 15.14 inches, according to information
from the University of California at Los Angeles Meteorology
Department.
The hot, dry Santa Ana winds blow on and off each year from about October
to February but this year the winds were unusually strong and blew for days
on end. The winds started fires by bringing down electrical lines and then
fanned the flames into towering infernos, according to the U.S. Forest Service.
"These fires are among the worst disasters in California history," said
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger after viewing the area in October.
Santa Ana winds usually last just a day or two at a time - blowing at 20 mph
from the Great Basin of Nevada, Utah and Southern Idaho - but this year the
winds clocked 30 to 40 mph with gusts of 85 to 105 mph. They blew for 78
days, three times as many days as their
average, according to NASA.
"In the future, catastrophic fires such as those going on now in California
may simply be a normal part of the landscape," said Neilson. The fires "may
be another piece of evidence that climate change is a reality, one with serious
effects."
"I think we can demonstrate higher severity, larger fires and certainly over the
last seven to eight years, more frequent fires and a longer fire season," said
Abigail Kimbell, chief of the U.S. Forest Service, who recently testified to a
committee of the U.S. Congress, about climate change and forest fires.
Kimbell, an appointee of U.S. President George W. Bush, said the fires may be
due to factors related to global warming but said more research is needed
before a definitive relationship can be made between global warming and the
large forest fires.
The small, frequent fires that are a natural part of the California ecosystem
have not been allowed to burn. This has led to the accumulation of large
amounts of dead and dry timber, and it helped fuel the recent, large fires,
Kimbell said.
The fires themselves may be adding to global warming, by releasing huge
amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere.
Christine Wiedinmyer, of the National Centre for Atmospheric Research in
Boulder, Colorado, estimates that between Oct. 19 and 26, the Southern
California fires emitted 7.9 million metric tons of CO2, the equivalent of 25
percent of the average monthly emissions from all fossil fuel burning
throughout California.
"Enormous fires like this pump a large amount of CO2 quickly into the
atmosphere," Wiedinmyer says.
Wiedinmyer’s colleague, Jason Neff, an assistant professor of geosciences at
the University of Colorado in Boulder, studies CO2 across the continental U.S.
In the undisturbed, natural climate and ecosystem of the U.S. continent, CO2
was kept in balance, with excess CO2 taken up by forests and oceans, he
says.
The forests of the western U.S. and the oceans are unable to absorb all of the
excess CO2 emissions, Neff told IPS.
The problem is muted in the eastern U.S., where large amounts of farmland
have been allowed to grow into woodlands during the past century. The
woodlands use the CO2 to grow. In the West, there is no massive new growth
of forest and excessive amounts of CO2 are causing trouble.
"It starts a feedback process. The western U.S. starts to get warm and dry. As
this happens, it increases the likelihood of greater frequency and severity of
forest fires," Neff said. "The fires release CO2, which causes more warming
and drying, and this causes more fires… In a natural situation the CO2 is
balanced. But we’re not in a natural climate anymore."
(*This story is part of a series of features on sustainable development by IPS-
Inter Press Service and IFEJ-International Federation of Environmental
Journalists.)
(END/2007)
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