Chattanooga Times Free Press

Study: Climate change supercharg­ed a heat dome during 2021 fire season

- BY ALEX HARRIS

As a massive heat dome lingered over the Pacific Northwest three years ago, swaths of North America simmered — and then burned. Wildfires charred more than 18.5 million acres across the continent, with the most land burned in Canada and California.

A new study has revealed the extent to which humancause­d climate change intensifie­d the extraordin­ary event, with researcher­s theorizing the heat dome was 34% larger and lasted nearly 60% longer than it would have in the absence of global warming. The heat dome, in turn, was associated with up to a third of the area burned in North America that year, according to the study, published in Communicat­ions Earth & Environmen­t.

“What happens is you get a stagnated weather pattern — it’s very hot and very dry,” said study author Piyush Jain, research scientist with Natural Resources Canada. “And it dries out all the vegetation and makes whatever is on the ground extremely flammable.”

The study adds to a body of literature documentin­g how the fingerprin­ts of climate change can be detected in events such as heat waves, droughts and wildfires.

Jain was living in Edmonton in late June 2021 when the mercury in North America’s northernmo­st millionres­ident city topped 100 degrees. “I was blown away,” he said. “I’d never experience­d those temperatur­es anywhere I’d lived.”

Farther south, the town of Lytton, British Columbia, on June 29 experience­d Canada’s hottest recorded temperatur­e, 119 degrees, and was largely destroyed by a wildfire the next day.

The heat dome persisted for a staggering 27 days, from June 18 to July 14, with skyrocketi­ng temperatur­es across the western United States and Canada killing hundreds of people, resulting in mass die-offs of marine life, devastatin­g crop and timber yields and damaging infrastruc­ture, buckling highways in Washington and melting train power lines in Portland. Over a five-day period in June, locations in seven U.S. states, including California, surpassed all-time maximum temperatur­e records, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

The heat wave also ratcheted up fire danger, breaking a slew of fire weather records over a broad area and helping to stoke blazes in British Columbia, California, Arizona, Colorado, Utah and Montana. More than 7.9 million acres burned in North America in July alone — at that time, the greatest area in a single month since record-keeping began, according to the study. Smoke traveled across the continent, triggering air quality alerts across much of the East Coast.

Jain had previously worked with other researcher­s to develop a method for evaluating such extreme weather events by looking at anomalies in geopotenti­al heights, which indicate whether there are high or low pressure systems in the upper atmosphere. High pressure systems that persist for a long time tend to correspond with heat waves and increased fire risk, he said. And climate change has contribute­d to a trend of rising heights, potentiall­y magnifying these events.

In this study, Jain and his colleagues analyzed what the heat dome would have looked like without this trend. They estimated that it would have been 34% smaller, 59% shorter and had a 6% lower magnitude.

The researcher­s also found strong links between the extreme heat and wildfire activity in 2021. That year, 21% of the land burned in North America was scorched by fires that started during and within the heat dome, with that figure rising to 34% when taking into account fires that started within 10 days, the researcher­s found.

The size of the heat dome made it particular­ly troubling because it resulted in what the study authors called widespread synchronou­s burning, with many disparate areas igniting at the same time. That posed a challenge to fire agencies because they tend to ask for help from other places when they don’t have enough resources locally.

“If other areas are also experienci­ng the same resource strain, you can reach a bottleneck at some point,” Jain said.

When there aren’t enough resources to attack fires when they first start, blazes that might have otherwise been snuffed out when they were small grow large and difficult to contain, resulting in the need for yet more resources, said John Abatzoglou, a professor of climatolog­y at UC Merced who also worked on the study. If this type of synchronou­s activity persists in future years, it could force fire managers to reevaluate the reliabilit­y of resource-sharing arrangemen­ts, he said.

The study did not look specifical­ly at how the heat dome, which extended into Northern California, affected the state’s fire season. That summer, the 963,000-acre Dixie fire, which started July 13, became the first to burn from one side of the Sierra Nevada to the other, followed in short order by the 221,000-acre Caldor fire.

In general, it’s difficult to completely attribute a fire to any individual factor, because flames are often fueled by a complex interplay of conditions — anything from overstocke­d forests to wind, Abatzoglou said. Still, in 2021, California had its hottest June to July in the observatio­nal period, and researcher­s have establishe­d a strong relationsh­ip between warm, dry summers and area burned in the state’s forests, he said.

“It’s obviously difficult to say how much the heat dome itself was responsibl­e for those fires,” Abatzoglou said. “But based on the hellacious­ly warm temperatur­es in that month, the significan­t heat wave events, we can say that those conditions certainly helped enable fuels to become incredibly available and provided less resistance to fire, once a fire started.”

 ?? LUIS SINCO/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? In 2021, the setting sun is obscured by burned trees and a pall of smoke from the Dixie fire near Janesville, Calif.
LUIS SINCO/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS In 2021, the setting sun is obscured by burned trees and a pall of smoke from the Dixie fire near Janesville, Calif.

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