Summer wildfires in northern hemisphere caused record levels of carbon emissions

The Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service reported forests going up in flames emitted more than 2.5 billion tonnes of CO2, equivalent to India's annual emissions from all sources, in July and August alone.

Intense fires across the world have scorched millions of hectares, causing record amounts of CO2 to go into the atmosphere.

Intense fires across the world like this one in California, scorched millions of hectares, causing record amounts of CO2 to go into the atmosphere. Source: National Park Service

Wildfires in Siberia, North America and around the Mediterranean caused record levels of planet-warming CO2 emissions this summer, the EU's Earth monitoring service says.

Globally, forests going up in flames emitted more than 2.5 billion tonnes of CO2, equivalent to India's annual emissions from all sources, in July and August alone, the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) reported on Tuesday.

More than half of CO2 emissions from wildfires in July came from North America and Siberia.
Intense fires across the world have scorched millions of hectares, causing record amounts of CO2 to go into the atmosphere.
Wildfires in Russia's vast Siberia region endangered several villages and prompted authorities to evacuate residents of some areas. Source: AP
Heatwaves, drought conditions, and reduced soil moisture amplified by global warming have contributed to unprecedented fires in three continents.

Even the Arctic Circle was on fire, releasing some 66 million tonnes of CO2 from June through August, with nearly a billion tonnes from Russia as a whole over the same period.

"What stood out as unusual were the number of fires, the size of the area in which they were burning, their intensity, and also their persistence," said Mark Parrington, senior scientist and wildfire expert at CAMS.

Fires started raging across northeastern Siberia in June and only started to abate in late August and early September, the satellite-based monitoring service reported.

Emissions for the region from June through August were nearly double compared to the year before.

Burnable area doubled

While satellite images do not reveal how these fires start, many of the blazes early in the summer are thought to have been caused by "zombie" fires that smoulder through the winter and then reignite.

In the western US and Canada's British Columbia which saw record temperatures nearing 50 degrees Celsius, fires ravaged huge swathes of forest.
A home burns along Marina Drive above Lake Mendocino during the Hopkins fire, Sunday, Sept. 12, 2021 in Calpella, Calif. in Mendocino County. (Kent Porter/Santa Rosa Press Democrat via AP)
A home burns along Marina Drive above Lake Mendocino during the Hopkins fire in Calpella, California. Source: The Press Democrat
Massive plumes of smoke from Siberia and North America moved across the Atlantic, reaching Britain and parts of Europe in August.

Nations along the Mediterranean rim, meanwhile, saw uncontrolled wildfires of their own, made worse by persistent heatwaves.

Daily fire intensity for Turkey reached the highest levels ever recorded in the nearly 20-year dataset. Other countries scorched by out-of-control blazes included Greece, Italy, Albania, North Macedonia, Algeria and Tunisia. While fires also hit Spain and Portugal in August.
Rising temperatures and increased dryness due to changing rainfall patterns create ideal conditions for bush or forest fires.

The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) has reported that the five-year period to 2020 was "unprecedented" for fires, especially in Europe and North America.

"Globally, increases in temperature and aridity have increased the length of fire seasons and doubled potential burnable area," the UN’s IPCC climate science advisory panel concluded in a draft report obtained by AFP.


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3 min read
Published 22 September 2021 7:36am
Updated 22 February 2022 5:20pm
Source: AFP, SBS


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