Dubai Telegraph - Extreme fire: 'unprecedented risk' poorly understood

EUR -
AED 3.77611
AFN 75.566581
ALL 98.044093
AMD 410.135039
ANG 1.853308
AOA 940.165806
ARS 1070.956461
AUD 1.658297
AWG 1.85051
AZN 1.751785
BAM 1.951701
BBD 2.076339
BDT 124.919703
BGN 1.955875
BHD 0.387523
BIF 2997.825651
BMD 1.028061
BND 1.405335
BOB 7.106076
BRL 6.230259
BSD 1.02834
BTN 89.023172
BWP 14.362836
BYN 3.365399
BYR 20149.994089
BZD 2.065662
CAD 1.485337
CDF 2914.553088
CHF 0.940645
CLF 0.037639
CLP 1038.588674
CNY 7.530859
CNH 7.552054
COP 4460.499329
CRC 515.517339
CUC 1.028061
CUP 27.243614
CVE 110.424429
CZK 25.26419
DJF 182.707392
DKK 7.461291
DOP 63.097281
DZD 139.528832
EGP 51.820032
ERN 15.420914
ETB 128.840117
FJD 2.394303
FKP 0.846698
GBP 0.844875
GEL 2.920095
GGP 0.846698
GHS 15.369912
GIP 0.846698
GMD 74.538376
GNF 8887.587044
GTQ 7.939249
GYD 215.148158
HKD 8.0031
HNL 26.15957
HRK 7.586625
HTG 134.24806
HUF 412.859384
IDR 16846.011895
ILS 3.662882
IMP 0.846698
INR 89.017894
IQD 1346.759809
IRR 43268.518015
ISK 145.481298
JEP 0.846698
JMD 162.478771
JOD 0.729002
JPY 160.594465
KES 133.137797
KGS 89.904323
KHR 4143.08588
KMF 491.670531
KPW 925.254945
KRW 1498.589027
KWD 0.317229
KYD 0.857
KZT 545.538982
LAK 22427.149392
LBP 92062.856003
LKR 304.84571
LRD 195.331933
LSL 19.317657
LTL 3.035597
LVL 0.621864
LYD 5.084372
MAD 10.331503
MDL 19.415225
MGA 4820.875462
MKD 61.50275
MMK 3339.101775
MNT 3493.351126
MOP 8.247479
MRU 40.856989
MUR 48.175324
MVR 15.837318
MWK 1785.742178
MXN 21.351325
MYR 4.632482
MZN 65.696927
NAD 19.317652
NGN 1602.089407
NIO 37.832083
NOK 11.756885
NPR 142.437475
NZD 1.839798
OMR 0.395783
PAB 1.02834
PEN 3.863971
PGK 4.182298
PHP 60.094313
PKR 286.62719
PLN 4.261361
PYG 8101.144023
QAR 3.74266
RON 4.97623
RSD 117.08487
RUB 105.374682
RWF 1424.892439
SAR 3.857577
SBD 8.705628
SCR 15.47696
SDG 617.864963
SEK 11.491876
SGD 1.406269
SHP 0.846698
SLE 23.419609
SLL 21557.923441
SOS 587.540582
SRD 36.038715
STD 21278.785457
SVC 8.996094
SYP 13366.848104
SZL 19.317644
THB 35.421878
TJS 11.224527
TMT 3.598213
TND 3.30265
TOP 2.407825
TRY 36.561795
TTD 6.982268
TWD 33.796787
TZS 2600.994479
UAH 43.29769
UGX 3789.042461
USD 1.028061
UYU 45.315712
UZS 13335.253458
VES 56.229852
VND 26038.213025
VUV 122.053457
WST 2.879421
XAF 654.582282
XAG 0.033917
XAU 0.000379
XCD 2.778386
XDR 0.792628
XOF 654.436177
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.167119
ZAR 19.259817
ZMK 9253.785666
ZMW 28.563014
ZWL 331.035198
  • CMSD

    0.1400

    23.64

    +0.59%

  • SCS

    0.1400

    11.7

    +1.2%

  • BCC

    -0.7000

    127.76

    -0.55%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.25

    +0.22%

  • NGG

    0.3800

    59.53

    +0.64%

  • GSK

    -0.0400

    33.4

    -0.12%

  • BCE

    0.2040

    23.024

    +0.89%

  • RBGPF

    -2.4100

    59.59

    -4.04%

  • RIO

    1.4400

    61.23

    +2.35%

  • AZN

    -0.1250

    66.785

    -0.19%

  • BTI

    0.4650

    36.355

    +1.28%

  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    7.12

    +0.98%

  • BP

    -0.1450

    31.635

    -0.46%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    12.39

    +0.56%

  • RELX

    0.2950

    48.205

    +0.61%

  • VOD

    -0.0150

    8.465

    -0.18%

Extreme fire: 'unprecedented risk' poorly understood
Extreme fire: 'unprecedented risk' poorly understood / Photo: Daryann GAUTHIER - Societe De Protection Des Forets/AFP/File

Extreme fire: 'unprecedented risk' poorly understood

In an era of town-torching megablazes spewing smoke plumes visible from space, scientists say there is still a lot they don't know about the effects of extreme fire on people, nature and the climate.

Text size:

Athens, Maui and now Los Angeles are among major cities across the globe to suffer catastrophic fires, while blazes in Canada's forests have broken records in recent years.

Changes in fire behaviour wrought by climate change and other human influences represent "an unprecedented risk that is still very poorly understood", an international group of scientists warned last year in a report for the European Space Agency and FutureEarth.

Human activities, they said, "have become an inexhaustible source of wildfires".

Scientists tallying effects on people and planet are flying planes through smoke belched by raging infernos, scouring satellite images and scooping samples from soils and waterways.

Sometimes the flames come to them.

In late December 2021, Christine Wiedinmyer, a University of Colorado professor specialising in air pollution and fire emissions, was working at home when emergency services rang telling her to leave.

What started as two small fires on the edges of Boulder had become a monster wall of flame in under an hour, whipped by hurricane-force winds over snow-free grassland.

Wiedinmyer found it hard to believe there was a serious risk on that winter's day but the pasture around town was tinder-dry from months of drought and the fire was already bearing down with the force of a blowtorch.

"You could see the smoke plume right behind my house," she told AFP.

Wiedinmyer joined tens of thousands of locals inching out of town in heavy traffic engulfed in churning smoke and flying embers.

The next day it began to snow.

Wiedinmyer returned to a soot-smeared home and questions from neighbours: were surviving structures contaminated? If so, how could they be safely cleaned?

- Forecast fireweather-

Fire has played a role in nature for millions of years -- some species thrive on it -- and human history is entwined with the ability to tame it.

But destructive and intense megafires are now increasing, as humans shape a new combustible era that prominent fire historian Stephen Pyne has called the "Pyrocene".

"Fire has been a companion and now it's becoming our worst enemy," he said.

Tinderbox conditions -- a combination of heat, drought and strong winds often called "fire weather" -- are made more common by climate change.

But it is not the only factor.

Lightning, power lines and arson have provided a spark, while damage risk grows as homes and businesses encroach into fire-prone areas.

In some forest regions, decades of overzealous fire prevention have allowed a build-up of flammable vegetation, leading to calls to relearn indigenous fire management techniques.

Intense rainfall -- on the rise as warming alters the water cycle -- may make things worse, spurring plants to grow fast and then dry into kindling.

Research in 2021 linked melting Arctic sea ice to larger wildfires in the western United States.

With warming of two degrees Celsius -- just above the upper limit of the Paris climate deal -- and expected changes in rainfall, wildfires are projected to burn 35 percent more land, the UN's climate expert panel has said.

There are limitations to humans' ability to adapt, said Kirsten Thonicke, of Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, as smoke carries pollution huge distances.

"You cannot evacuate Sydney or San Francisco, you can only try to protect people there," she said, stressing the need to cut planet-heating emissions.

- 'Regime change' -

Some fires change the weather.

Firestorm clouds can whip up winds and shoot off lightning bolts, while fire tornados are towering funnels of flame thrashing across the landscape.

And extreme blazes are affecting the environment and atmosphere.

The 2023 Canadian wildfires released more carbon in five months than Russia emitted from fossil fuels in a year, NASA scientists found.

Most of that CO2 is reabsorbed as trees regrow but there are concerns that more frequent fires could reduce forests' capacity to take up carbon.

In 2023, researchers found that a chemical reaction from smoke released by massive wildfires in Australia made 2020's ozone hole 10 percent wider.

Another study found ash from the same fires landed on the ocean, triggering plankton blooms that soaked up the extra CO2, at least temporarily.

Joan Llort, of the Barcelona Supercomputing Center, who led that research, said ash from huge fires was part of "regime change" in the Arctic, coating ice and causing it to melt faster.

- Close to home -

What preoccupied Christine Wiedinmyer after Boulder's Marshall Fire was residue in homes.

"There's a lot of nasty stuff that gets put out there when you burn a house or a car, or electronics," she said. "Where does it go?"

Wiedinmyer and colleagues took samples from the air, soils and houses and measured the effects of cleaning.

Early research found harmful smoke compounds were sucked into walls only to leach out days or even months later.

One finding of potential use to residents in LA, where thousands of homes have burned, was that wiping down walls and floors with soap and water reduced contamination.

"That is a really useful piece of information to help guide future people who are exposed," Wiedinmyer said.

R.Mehmood--DT