
When discussing any particular disaster and its relationship to Global Warming, one needs to be cautious, to avoid saying "Global Warming caused" as it is quite difficult to show a direct cause and effect relationship with a global trend to any particular activity. Thus, stronger storms are correlated with rising temperature which correlated with a storm like Katrina. Did Global Warming cause Katrina? Who knows? Was Katrina's strength, differentiation from past storms, within what Global Warming analysis/modeling suggests could happen? Yes.Well, be careful if anyone says that Global Warming "caused" the California fires. On the other hand, it seems clear that Global Warming is a contributing factor to the conditions in which the storms have occurred.
The RWSM blame game; Global Warming not involved
The right wing sound machine is having a field day with screaming messages blaming loony "damned environmentalists" for creating the conditions for the wildfires while strongly denying the potential for Global Warming as a contributing factor. No surprise that that stalwart of great journalism, Glenn Beck, provides a premiere example of this (also providing yet another reason why CNN should stop giving him a soap box).
Now, by the way, as to enviromentalists impacting clearing brush and thus contributing to the fire, according to the Forest Fire's tracking website, there have been zero (ZERO) appeals of fuels reduction projects in the southern California national forests in the last ten years. Appeals are a prerequisite to litigation, so the same goes for litigation.
As this suggests, Glenn Beck and others simply are spouting talking points disconnected with facts, truthiness rather than truth. They are, sadly, given loudspeakers for disseminating their dangerous truthiness.
Returning to Reality
The scientific analysis of US fire records clearly show changed patterns, with a strong correlation in terms of increased fires and Global Warming trends.
As per Daniel James Brown's OPED yesterday, Smarter ways to handle fire,increased fuel loads in our wild lands are only one element of a converging series of fire-related threats that now challenge us in unprecedented ways. Our penchant for building homes in fire-prone areas is another obvious and much-discussed factor. And a third, now undeniable, one is the role that global warming plays in raising ambient temperatures, promoting drought in already drought-prone regions and lengthening our fire seasons. Global Warming is not the cause of forest fires, but helps create the conditions, fan the flames for them.
Tom Setnam, a University of Arizona Professor and a leading 'fire ecologist', notes that "The fire season in the last 15 years or so has increased more than two months over the whole Western U.S. So actually 78 days of average longer fire season in the last 15 years compared to the previous 15 or 20 years ..."
Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Univ of Arizona combiend work looked at the forest fires from 11 Western states over a 34 year period "and found the number of fires increased in size and severity since 1987, the same year that spring and summer temperatures began to rise." They examined every forest fire that burned at least 1000 acres from 1970 through 2003. Of 1166 fires in that period, nearly 900 occurred after 1987 -- e.g, 80% after the mid-point in time. And, well, "they also found that air temperatures from 1987 to 2003 were 1.6 degrees higher than during the previous 17 years; that 6.5 times more acreage burned during that warmer period."According to the head of the US Government's firefighting programs, "We got records going back to 1960 of the acres burned in America. So, that's 47 fire seasons. Seven of the 10 busiest fire seasons have been since 1999."
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