The world is unprepared for the increasing ferocity of wildfires turbocharged by climate change, scientists say, as blazes from North America to Europe greet the northern hemisphere summer in the hottest year on record. Wildfires have already burned swathes through Turkey, Canada, Greece and the United States early this season as extreme heatwaves push temperatures to scorching highs. While extra resources have been poured into improving firefighting in recent years, experts said the same was not true for planning and preparing for such disasters. “We are still actually catching up with the situation,” said Stefan Doerr, director of the Centre for Wildfire Research at the UK’s Swansea University, according to Reuters.
Predicting how bad any one blaze will be — or where and when it will strike — can be challenging, with many factors including local weather conditions playing into calculations. But overall, wildfires are getting larger and burning more severely, said Doerr, who co-authored a recent paper examining the frequency and intensity of such extreme events. A separate study published in June found the frequency and magnitude of extreme wildfires appeared to have doubled over the past 20 years. By the end of the century, the number of extreme wildfires around the globe is tipped to rise 50 per cent, according to a 2022 report by the UN Environment Programme. Doerr said humanity had not yet faced up to this reality. “We’re clearly not well enough prepared for the situation that we’re facing now,” he said. Climate change is a major driver, though other factors such as land use and the location of housing developments play a big part, the Reuters report added.
Fires do not respect borders so responses have evolved between governments to jointly confront these disasters, said Jesus San-Miguel, an expert for the European Commission Joint Research Centre. The EU has a strong model of resource sharing, and even countries outside the bloc along the Mediterranean have benefited from firefighting equipment or financial help in times of need, San-Miguel said. But as wildfires become increasingly extreme, firefighting simply won’t be a fix. “We get feedback from our colleagues in civil protection who say, ‘We cannot fight the fires. The water evaporates before it reaches the ground,’” San-Miguel said. “Prevention is something we need to work on more,” he added. Controlled burns, grazing livestock, or mechanised vegetation removal are all effective ways to limit the amount of burnable fuel covering the forest floor, said Rory Hadden from the University of Edinburgh.
Campfire bans and establishing roads as firebreaks can all be effective in reducing starts and minimising spread, said Hadden, an expert on fire safety and engineering. But such efforts require funding and planning from governments that may have other priorities and cash-strapped budgets, and the return is not always immediately evident. “Whatever method or technique you’re using to manage a landscape... the result of that investment is nothing happens, so it’s a very weird psychological thing. The success is: well, nothing happened,” said Hadden.
Local organisations and residents often take the lead in removing vegetation in the area immediately around their homes and communities. But not everyone is prepared to accept their neighbourhood might be at risk.
“People don’t think that it will happen to them, but it eventually will,” San-Miguel said, pointing to historically cold or wet climates like the US Pacific Northwest that have witnessed major fires in recent years.
Canada has adapted to a new normal of high latitude wildfires, while some countries in Scandinavia are preparing for ever-greater fire risk. But how best to address the threat remains an open question, said Guillermo Rein from Imperial College London, even in places where fire has long been part of the landscape.