Wednesday, December 19, 2012

[californiadisasters] Re: [DailyBrief] U.S. Wildfires: Burn Area Expected To Double By 2050



Climate and weather are two separate scientific disciplines.

On Wed, Dec 19, 2012 at 12:27 PM, James Stevens <jstevenstexas@aol.com> wrote:
 

They can't tell us if we are getting snow or not in five days but they know how many acres are going to burn in 38 years? Rigghhhhtttt.....



On Dec 19, 2012, at 13:44, Kim Noyes <kimnoyes@gmail.com> wrote:

> U.S. Wildfires: Burn Area Expected To Double By 2050
>
> By Andrew Freedom - Climate Central
>
> Posted: 12/17/2012 9:11 am EST
>
> Warmer and drier conditions in coming decades will likely cause the burned
> area from wildfires in the U.S. to double in size by 2050, according to new
> research based on satellite observations and computer modeling experiments.
> The research, which was first presented at the annual meeting of the American
> Geophysical Union <http://sites.agu.org/> in San Francisco on Dec. 4,

> provides insight into both recent wildfire trends and the sharp increase in
> dryness — and therefore wildfire susceptibility — in certain regions of the
> country.
>
> The 2012 U.S. wildfire season was one of the worst on record, with massive
> fires affecting<http://www.climatecentral.org/news/western-us-poised-for-an-active-wildfire-season>
> Colorado<http://www.climatecentral.org/news/colorados-most-destructive-fire-now-fully-contained>and
> New
> Mexico<http://www.climatecentral.org/blogs/new-mexico-wildfire-continues-to-grow>,

> in particular. The new research suggests that high wildfire years, such as
> 2012, would likely occur 2-to-4 times per decade by 2050, rather than once
> per decade as they do now.
>
> [image: 2012 wildfire
> season]<http://www.climatecentral.org/images/uploads/news/12_14_12_andrew_2012firesus.jpg>
>
> *A visualization of cumulative fires from Jan. 1 through Oct. 31, 2012,

> detected by the MODIS instrument on board the Terra and Aqua satellites.
> Bright yellow shows areas that are more intense and have a larger area that
> is actively burning, flaming and/or smoldering. Click to enlarge the image.
> Credit: NASA.*

>
> In addition, the research shows that the midsection of the country — from
> Texas to North Dakota — is likely to become drier as the climate continues
> to warm in response to manmade emissions of greenhouse gases, such as
> carbon dioxide. That drying will significantly increase the amount of
> burned area in this zone, said Doug Morton of NASA's Goddard Space Flight
> Center in Greenbelt, Md<http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/home/index.html>.

> Morton said other regions of the country, including the West, will likely
> see a continued increase in burned area as well.
>
> The research findings are consistent with other recent reports, including
> work done by Climate Central
> scientists<http://www.climatecentral.org/news/report-the-age-of-western-wildfires-14873>,

> showing that Western wildfires are already much larger than they were as
> recently as in the 1970s. In land managed by the U.S. Forest Service, there
> were nearly five times more fires larger than 25,000 acres each year in the
> past decade compared to the 1970s.
>
> The NASA study used a burned area dataset that was derived from three
> satellites: Landsat and the MODIS imagers aboard the agency's
> Terra<http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/terra/index.html>and
> Aqua <http://aqua.nasa.gov/> satellites. The study used that satellite

> information to develop a time series of burned area, focusing on the
> relationship between wildfires and climate conditions during the past 25
> years. The researchers then used eight climate models built for the
> U.N. Intergovernmental
> Panel on Climate Change's <http://www.ipcc.ch/> upcoming Fifth Assessment

> Report, which is due out beginning in 2013, to determine how changes in
> dryness may alter wildfire ignitions and burned area.
>
> "What our analysis shows is that for the major U.S. burning regions . . .
> we see a strong increase in the risk of fire by mid-century based on
> looking at this projection of the dryness of the climate. And that
> translates to about a doubling of the projected burned area," Morton said
> in an interview.
>
> Through August of this year, the U.S. burned area was greater than 6.17
> million acres, according to a satellite-derived fire database that provides
> estimates of burned area. That was not enough to set a record, but it
> exceeded the area burned during 12 of the 15 years since record-keeping
> began in 1997.
>
> The satellite data differs from numbers maintained by the U.S. National
> Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) <http://www.nifc.gov/>, which shows that

> fires torched 9.2 million acres of forest, brushland and grassland across
> the nation through November, the most recent month for which numbers are
> available. That's the second-largest area burned since the NIFC began
> keeping records in 2000 (the worst was 2006), and nearly 50 percent more
> than the 10-year average over the first decade of this century.
>
> The West, along with much of the rest of the country, was mired in drought
> for much of the year, which contributed to that region's particularly
> severe wildfire season.
>
> "When you have reduced rainfall and less snowpack, you dry out that whole
> Western U.S. much more quickly than you do in other fire years. It gives
> you a longer time period to burn and it sets up those ecosystems to be more
> flammable whether you get ignitions from human sources, which are quite
> common, or from natural sources. So it's possible just by lengthening the
> fire season, you get more burned area," Morton said.
>
> While wildfires are influenced by climate conditions, they also contribute
> to climate change as well, since fires burn biomass and emit large
> quantities of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, further warming the
> climate.
>
> The satellite datasets gathered by Morton and his colleagues allowed them
> to get a better idea how much carbon wildfires have released into the
> atmosphere. They found that carbon emissions from wildfires have grown from
> an average of 8.8 million tons per year from 1984-1995, to an average of 22
> million tons per year from 1996-2008.
>
> "With the climate change forecast for this region, this trend likely will
> continue as the Western U.S. gets warmer and drier on average," said Chris
> Williams of Clark University, in a press release. "If this comes to pass,
> we can anticipate increased fire severity and an even greater area burned
> annually, causing a further rise in the release of carbon dioxide."
>
> There are opportunities to limit the uptick in fire-related emissions, the
> researchers found. By reducing the number of prescribed burns and
> agricultural fires, land managers may be able to reduce the amount of
> carbon emissions from fires, despite the increase in large non-prescribed
> wildfires. About 70 percent of active fire detections in the U.S. each year
> are due to agricultural fires and land-management activities.
>
> --
> Check out http://groups.yahoo.com/group/californiadisasters/
> Read my blog at http://eclecticarcania.blogspot.com/
> My Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/derkimster
> Linkedin profile: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/kim-noyes/9/3a1/2b8
> Follow me on Twitter @DisasterKim



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