The Citizen (KZN)

‘Don’t blame climate for killer blaze’

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– Neither human-induced climate change, nor the El Nino weather phenomenon were determinin­g factors in the devastatin­g forest fires that killed more than 130 people in Chile this month, according to the results of an internatio­nal study.

Improper land use had a bigger impact, it found, with the expansion in recent decades of pine and eucalyptus monocultur­es – much more flammable than native vegetation – and the growth of informal settlement­s in forest zones.

“Fire risk is increasing notably due to current land management practices”, in the affected zone, said the study by researcher­s from South America and Europe for World Weather Attributio­n (WWA) – a scientific project that seeks to quantify how climate change influences the intensity and likelihood of a particular extreme weather event.

On 2 February, several fires broke out around the coastal town of Vina del Mar in Chile’s coastal Valparaiso region.

The infernos claimed the lives of at least 133 people and destroyed some 7 000 homes in the deadliest natural disaster to befall Chile since a 2010 earthquake and tsunami killed about 500 people.

The WWA study found that fire-conducive weather conditions in the area – high temperatur­es, low humidity and strong winds – had not been significan­tly altered by climate change, nor by El Nino.

This did not mean the threat of global warming should not be taken seriously, the researcher­s said.

“Unless the world rapidly stops burning fossil fuels, fire danger will increase,” it said.

“The risk of an increase in dangerous fire weather conditions attributab­le to human-induced climate change needs to be taken very seriously.” –

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