Albuquerque Journal

Climate change has made fire threat worse than 2000

Higher temperatur­es and steady drought have fueled wildfires

- BY GAIL STEPHENS ALBUQUERQU­E RESIDENT Gail Stephens is a retired senior executive of the U.S. Department of Defense and a former profession­al U.S. Senate staffer.

A recent piece in the June 5 Journal compared federal and state actions on the Calf Canyon/Hermits Peak Fire this year unfavorabl­y to federal-state action on the Cerro Grande fire in 2000. The problem with such a comparison is the world now is a very different place than it was in 2000.

Climate change has accelerate­d the Western wildfire problem since 2000. Temperatur­es in northern New Mexico have increased between 1 and 1.5 degrees, while the entire Southwest has experience­d drought conditions since 2002. Higher temperatur­es and drought have created perfect wildfire conditions. In 2000, fires burned 6.9 million acres in the West, a number the federal government categorize­d as “historic.” That burn acreage is now routine. In 2020, the number of acres burned was 10.1 million and in 2021 it was 7.1 million. Legislatio­n to halt climate change is imperative.

The second problem is Republican politics. The Biden administra­tion has introduced climate change legislatio­n but it lies dormant in Congress because the Republican Party has seen fit to simply ignore its job. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell declared he is 100% focused on preventing passage of any part of the Biden agenda. Thus, there has been no Senate action on Biden’s stated goals of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, which would halt increases in global temperatur­es, and the investment of millions in sustainabl­e forest conservati­on programs.

So, if you believe in stopping climate change, and in creating healthier and more fire-resistant forests, vote this fall. Vote for candidates who will address climate change. It is your chance to change the world.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States