MENU

Social Channels

SEARCH ARCHIVE

  • Type

  • Topic

  • Sort

A wildfire burns through forests at the Summit Trail Fire in the Colville Reservation, Washington
A wildfire burns through forests at the Summit Trail Fire in the Colville Reservation, Washington. Credit: US Forest Service / Alamy Stock Photo.
WILDFIRES
25 November 202116:00

Melting Arctic sea ice linked to ‘worsening fire hazards’ in western US

Ayesha Tandon

11.25.21

Ayesha Tandon

25.11.2021 | 4:00pm
Wildfires Melting Arctic sea ice linked to ‘worsening fire hazards’ in western US

Arctic sea ice melt has driven an increase in “fire-favourable weather” across the western US over the past four decades, according to new research.

The study, published inNature Communications, finds that low Arctic sea ice levels during July to October have knock-on impacts in the atmosphere that push the jet stream northwards. This tends to bring hotter and drier conditions in the western US over the following autumn, resulting in more frequent and intense fires in the region, the authors find.

They add that this mechanism may strengthen over the coming decades as the Arctic melts further, making the western US “even more susceptible to destructive fire hazards”.

Meanwhile, a separate study published inNature Climate Changefinds that extreme wildfire activity has increased globally over 1979-2020 – mainly driven by decreasing humidity and increasing temperatures.

As the climate warms and fire weather becomes “more extreme”, there may be “more catastrophic fires” stretching across larger regions, the authors warn.

Ice and fire

The impacts of climate change are diverse, affecting different parts of the world in different ways.

The Arctic is warming超过两倍(pdf) as the global average, driving rapid sea ice loss. Over the past 15 years, scientists have recorded the 15lowest Arctic sea ice extentsin the satellite record, while September of this year marked thelowest level of “multi-year” Arctic sea iceon record.

Meanwhile, hotter and drier weather is driving wildfires to tear through parts of the US with increasing intensity and frequency. A 2018亚慱官网factcheck found that “most of the area burned today is in the western US, where drier conditions tend to allow for large, quickly-spreading wildfires”. Meanwhile, a recentGuardianarticle says:

“More than half of the 20 largest fires in California history burned in just the last four years. Eight of the top 20 fires in Oregon occurred in that time frame too. Last year, Arizona saw the most acres burned in its history. California’s August Complex fire, which consumed more than 1m acres alone, became the first-ever giga-fire in 2020.”

While these two impacts may seem unrelated, a new study – using a range of observations, sensitivity tests and targetedmodel runs– suggests that they are linked through a pattern of large-scale atmospheric pressure and circulation changes called a “teleconnection”.

Dr Jennifer Francisis the acting deputy director at theWoodwell Climate research centre和没有参与这项研究。She summarises the teleconnection and tells Carbon Brief why it is significant in a warming climate:

“Diminishing sea ice favours hotter, drier conditions in western states that set the stage for fierce wildfires, such as those scorching the region during recent years. These results are bad news, as sea ice is expected to continue its downward spiral because our emissions of heat-trapping, ice-melting gases show no signs of abating.”

The plot below highlights the link between low sea ice concentration and fire-favourable weather. It shows changes in sea ice concentration (blue), a fire weather index (red) a fire-favourable circulation index (yellow) over 1979-2020, where red shading indicates low sea ice concentration and blue sharing indicates high sea ice concentration.

Note that the y-axis for SIC is inverted, with low sea ice concentration at the top of the scale and high sea ice concentration at the bottom.

Plot showing changes in sea ice concentration fire weather index and fire-favourable circulation index 1979-2015
Plot showing changes in sea ice concentration (SIC, blue), fire weather index (FFWI, red) and fire-favourable circulation index (Z500i, yellow) over 1979-2015. Red shading indicates years with low sea ice concentration while blue shading indicates periods with high sea ice concentration. Note the inverted axis for SIC. Source: Zou et al (2021).

The plot shows that when sea ice concentrations are low, the fire favourable circulation index and fire weather index are generally high.Dr Hailong Wang, an Earth scientist at thePacific Northwest National Laboratory, is an author on the study. He tells Carbon Brief that the impact of melting sea ice on US wildfires is comparable to that of other, better known drivers:

“The fire weather changes driven by declining Arctic sea ice during the past four decades are of similar magnitude to other leading modes of climate variability, such as theEl Niño-Southern Oscillation, that also influence fire weather in the western US.”

The authors warn that as the Arctic continues to melt, weather conditions in the western US will get hotter and drier, driving “more and larger wildfires” across the region.

Arctic teleconnection

The study uses a range of observational and model-based techniques to determine the link between Arctic sea ice and worsening wildfires. Wang tells Carbon Brief about some of the methods used:

“We first used observational data to reveal a connection between Arctic sea ice extent and fire risk in the western US, and then conducted sensitivity experiments with a state-of-the-art fire-enabled climate model to show that declines in Arctic sea ice during the months preceding fire season can fuel increases in large autumn wildfires over the western US.”

The authors find that low levels of Arctic sea ice in the summer and autumn means the region reflects less of the sun’s incoming radiation, leading to stronger surface warming. A warmer surface means greater heating of the air immediately above it, which subsequently rises through the atmosphere.

The “teleconnection” describes the knock-on impact this has in the atmosphere, which, ultimately, shifts the jet stream further poleward and causes “suppressed precipitation and elevated surface air temperature andvapour pressure deficit在美国西部”,e authors say. The image below explains this teleconnection in greater detail.

An Arctic-driven teleconnection
An Arctic-driven teleconnection, in which melting Arctic sea ice ultimately pushes the jet stream poleward, leading to hotter and drier weather in the western US. The “H” and “L” indicate areas of high and low atmospheric pressure, respectively. Source: Zou et al (2021).

Thejet streamis a current of fast-flowing air high up in the troposphere, which separates cold polar air to the north from warm tropical air to the south. A poleward shift in the jet stream affects weather patterns in the western US by suppressing rainfall and bringing in warmer temperatures, the paper says.

This study feeds into along-standing discussionwithin scientific circles on whether changes in the Arctic can influence mid-latitude weather throughchanges to the jet stream and other mechanisms.

Expert analysis direct to your inbox.

Get a round-up of all the important articles and papers selected by Carbon Brief by email. Find out more about our newslettershere.

Dr Daniel Swainis a climate scientist atUCLA’sInstitute of Environment and Sustainability和没有参与这项研究。他告诉汽车bon Brief that the connection between Arctic sea ice loss and climate extremes in the western US climate extremes has been “discussed for some time”, but that there “hasn’t really been much convincing evidence to back up those claims” to date. Swain adds:

“My own personal view, as a climate scientist who focuses on western US extremes and follows the ‘Arctic/mid-latitude weather’ debate closely, has long been that some kind of connection probably does exist between recent Arctic sea ice loss and certain long-term climate trends in the US west. But the actual scientific evidence for that, until fairly recently, has been pretty weak. This new study does add an important empirical data point into the ‘a relationship probably does exist’ column, though with some caveats.”

Prof James Screen, an associate professor in climate science at theUniversity of Exeter, who was not involved in the research, tells Carbon Brief that past papers have connectedArctic sea ice loss to droughts in California, but that this study “goes an important extra step further” in “drawing a link to fire-favourable weather”.

He adds that the results of the study are “strengthened by the agreement between the observational analyses and model experiments”.

Similarly,Dr Judah Cohen– director of seasonal forecasting atAtmospheric and Environmental Research(AER), who was also not involved in the study – says that he was “impressed” by the analysis, which has “comprehensive and compelling” findings. He tells Carbon Brief that the “good consistency among all the different avenues of analysis”, makes the arguments and conclusions “quite convincing”.

‘Extreme fire weather’

Meanwhile, a second study exploring changes in wildfires over the past four decades has been published in Nature Climate Change.Dr Piyush Jainfrom Canada’snorthern forestry centreis the lead author of the study and explains its key findings to Carbon Brief:

“我们的研究表明,极端的火weather – the very hot and dry weather that are associated with wildfires – have been increasing globally over the last four decades. In fact, the eight most extreme fire weather years globally have occurred in the last decade…These changes in extreme fire weather have been driven predominantly by increases in temperature and decreases in atmospheric moisture.”

The paper explores three different indices – fire weather index (FWI), initial spread index (ISI) and vapour pressure deficit index (VPD). These indices measure the potential intensity of the fire, the potential rate of fire spread and difference between the saturation and actual vapour pressure (in which higher values result in drier conditions), respectively.

The authors focus on trends in “extreme” fire weather, by using the 95th percentile – the most extreme 5% – of results, over 1979-2020. The plot below shows changes in the 95th percentile in all three indices (FWI95, ISI95 and VID95) over this period, where the height of the bar shows deviation from the 1979-2020 average and the colour of the bar shows the annual global mean temperature difference compared to the 1979-2020 average.

Percentage anomaly in the 95 percentile in FWI, ISI and VPD over 1979-2020
Percentage anomaly in the 95% percentile in FWI (top), ISI (middle) and VPD (bottom) over 1979-2020, shown by the height of the bar. The colour of the bar shows the temperature anomaly. All anomalies calculated relative to the 1979-2020 average. Source: Jain et al (2021).

The plot shows that hotter years are linked to higher potential fire intensity, fire spread and dryness, and that fire conditions have been progressively worsening in recent decades. The authors find that over the studied period, FWI95, ISI95 and VID95 have increased by 14%, 12% and 12%, respectively.

The map below shows trends in the three indices for “burnable” parts of the planet. Red shows an increase in the indices – indicating higher potential fire intensity, fire spread and dryness – while blue shows a decrease. Jain explains that regions such as North Africa, which are dominated by desert, are “considered barren because there is essentially no vegetation there to burn”, and so they are not included in the analysis. These regions are shown in grey.

Significant trends in the 95 percentile in FWI,  ISI and VPD over 1979-2020
Significant trends in the 95% percentile in FWI (top), ISI (middle) and VPD (bottom) over 1979-2020. Source: Jain et al (2021).

The authors find that “significant increases” in fire weather occurred over “a quarter

to almost half of the global burnable land mass” over the past four decades. The study adds:

“Decreasingrelative humiditywas a driver of over three-quarters of significant increases in FWI95 and ISI95, while increasing temperature was a driver for 40% of significant trends.”

However, some regions have seen a decrease – most notably in India, where widespread use of irrigation has driven an increase in humidity that has suppressed wildfire activity, the authors say.

“This is the first study that I’m aware of that assesses the drivers of recent changes in extreme fire weather across the globe,” explainsDr Danielle Touma– a postdoctoral fellow at theNational Center for Atmospheric Research.

She tells Carbon Brief that while extreme fire weather conditions are “well documented” in the western US, this paper provides “new insight for many parts of the world that are also vulnerable to increases in fire weather conditions”.

Zou et al (2021) Increasing large wildfires over the western United States linked to diminishing sea ice in the Arctic, Nature Communications,doi: 10.1038/s41467-021-26232-9

Jain et al (2021) Observed increases in extreme fire weather driven by atmospheric humidity and temperature, Nature Climate Change,doi: 10.1038/s41558-021-01224-1

Sharelines from this story
  • Melting Arctic sea ice linked to ‘worsening fire hazards’ in western US

Expert analysis direct to your inbox.

Get a round-up of all the important articles and papers selected by Carbon Brief by email. Find out more about our newslettershere.