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Human-driven greenhouse gas and aerosol emissions cause distinct regional impacts on extreme fire weather

Earth Sciences

Human-driven greenhouse gas and aerosol emissions cause distinct regional impacts on extreme fire weather

D. Touma, S. Stevenson, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Danielle Touma, Samantha Stevenson, Flavio Lehner, and Sloan Coats reveals how past and future human activities shape wildfire risk. Discover how greenhouse gas-induced extreme fire weather may soar in the 21st century, especially in the Amazon, as aerosol-driven cooling wanes.

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Playback language: English
Abstract
Attribution studies have identified a robust anthropogenic fingerprint in increased 21st-century wildfire risk. However, the risks associated with individual aspects of anthropogenic aerosol and greenhouse gases (GHG) emissions, biomass burning, and land use/land cover change remain unknown. This study uses new climate model large ensembles isolating these influences to show that GHG-driven increases in extreme fire weather conditions have been balanced by aerosol-driven cooling throughout the 20th century. This compensation is projected to disappear due to future reductions in aerosol emissions, causing unprecedented increases in extreme fire weather risk in the 21st century as GHGs continue to rise. Changes to temperature and relative humidity drive the largest shifts in extreme fire weather conditions; this is particularly apparent over the Amazon, where GHGs cause a seven-fold increase by 2080. The results allow for increased understanding of the interacting roles of anthropogenic stressors in altering the regional expression of future wildfire risk.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jan 11, 2021
Authors
Danielle Touma, Samantha Stevenson, Flavio Lehner, Sloan Coats
Tags
wildfire risk
greenhouse gases
aerosol emissions
fire weather
climate change
Amazon
anthropogenic influences
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