Current:Home > ContactGlobal Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires -MoneyMatrix
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
View
Date:2025-04-17 09:28:22
Global warming caused mainly by burning of fossil fuels made the hot, dry and windy conditions that drove the recent deadly fires around Los Angeles about 35 times more likely to occur, an international team of scientists concluded in a rapid attribution analysis released Tuesday.
Today’s climate, heated 2.3 degrees Fahrenheit (1.3 Celsius) above the 1850-1900 pre-industrial average, based on a 10-year running average, also increased the overlap between flammable drought conditions and the strong Santa Ana winds that propelled the flames from vegetated open space into neighborhoods, killing at least 28 people and destroying or damaging more than 16,000 structures.
“Climate change is continuing to destroy lives and livelihoods in the U.S.” said Friederike Otto, senior climate science lecturer at Imperial College London and co-lead of World Weather Attribution, the research group that analyzed the link between global warming and the fires. Last October, a WWA analysis found global warming fingerprints on all 10 of the world’s deadliest weather disasters since 2004.
Several methods and lines of evidence used in the analysis confirm that climate change made the catastrophic LA wildfires more likely, said report co-author Theo Keeping, a wildfire researcher at the Leverhulme Centre for Wildfires at Imperial College London.
“With every fraction of a degree of warming, the chance of extremely dry, easier-to-burn conditions around the city of LA gets higher and higher,” he said. “Very wet years with lush vegetation growth are increasingly likely to be followed by drought, so dry fuel for wildfires can become more abundant as the climate warms.”
Park Williams, a professor of geography at the University of California and co-author of the new WWA analysis, said the real reason the fires became a disaster is because “homes have been built in areas where fast-moving, high-intensity fires are inevitable.” Climate, he noted, is making those areas more flammable.
All the pieces were in place, he said, including low rainfall, a buildup of tinder-dry vegetation and strong winds. All else being equal, he added, “warmer temperatures from climate change should cause many fuels to be drier than they would have been otherwise, and this is especially true for larger fuels such as those found in houses and yards.”
He cautioned against business as usual.
“Communities can’t build back the same because it will only be a matter of years before these burned areas are vegetated again and a high potential for fast-moving fire returns to these landscapes.”
We’re hiring!
Please take a look at the new openings in our newsroom.
See jobsveryGood! (7)
Related
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Report on racism against Roma and Sinti in Germany shows widespread discrimination
- The Challenge Stars Nany González and Kaycee Clark Are Engaged
- Parent Trap BFFs Lisa Ann Walter and Elaine Hendrix Discover Decades-Old Family Connection
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- '60 Minutes' producer Bill Owens revamps CBS News show with six 90-minute episodes this fall
- A woman in England says she's living in a sea of maggots in her new home amid trash bin battle
- Kilogram of Fentanyl found in NYC day care center where 1-year-old boy died of apparent overdose
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- As Slovakia’s trust in democracy fades, its election frontrunner campaigns against aid to Ukraine
Ranking
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- A truck-bus collision in northern South Africa leaves 20 dead, most of them miners going to work
- Billy Miller, 'Young and the Restless,' 'General Hospital' soap star, dies at 43
- Republican legislatures flex muscles to maintain power in two closely divided states
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- Two pilots were killed in a midair collision on the last day of Nevada air races
- 'The Care and Keeping of You,' American Girl's guide to puberty, turns 25
- Nigel becomes a hurricane but poses no immediate threat to land as it swirls through Atlantic
Recommendation
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
In Ukraine, bullets pierce through childhood. US nonprofits are reaching across borders to help
A Florida man bought a lottery ticket with his Publix sub. He won $5 million.
American Sepp Kuss earns 'life changing' Vuelta a España win
Bodycam footage shows high
Centuries after Native American remains were dug up, a new law returns them for reburial in Illinois
California fast food workers will earn at least $20 per hour. How's that minimum wage compare?
5 people shot, including 2 juveniles, in Boston's Dorchester neighborhood