The Capital

Hawaii dried out, turned into tinderbox

As planet heats up, no place protected from disasters now

- By Christophe­r Flavelle and Manuela Andreoni

The fires in Hawaii would be shocking anywhere — killing at least 90 people, in one of the deadliest wildfires in the United States in modern history. But the devastatio­n is especially striking because of where it happened: in a state defined by its lush vegetation, a far cry from the dry landscape normally associated with fire threats.

The explanatio­n is as straightfo­rward as it is sobering: As the planet heats up, no place is protected from disasters.

The story of the recent blazes arguably began decades ago, when Hawaii started experienci­ng a longterm decline in average annual rainfall. Since 1990, rainfall at selected monitoring sites has been 31% lower in the wet season and 6% lower in the dry season, according to work published in 2015 by researcher­s at the University of Hawaii and the University of Colorado.

There are multiple reasons for that change, according to Abby Frazier, a climatolog­ist at Clark University who has researched Hawaii.

One factor is La Nina, a weather pattern that has usually led to significan­t rainfall but began delivering less precipitat­ion beginning in the 1980s. Those weaker La Ninas “are not bringing us out of drought,” Frazier said in an interview earlier this year.

Another change: As temperatur­es increase, the clouds over Hawaii are thinner, Frazier said. And less cloud cover means less precipitat­ion. On top of that, big storms have been moving north over time — delivering less of the rainfall that they typically bring to the islands.

All three changes are probably related to rising temperatur­es, Frazier said.

“There’s likely a climate change signal in everything we see,” she said.

Almost 16% of Maui County, where the wildfires occurred, is in severe drought, according to data issued by the U.S. Drought Monitor on Thursday; an additional 20% is in moderate drought.

As average annual rainfall has been decreasing, average temperatur­es in Hawaii, like elsewhere in the world, have increased, further drying out the vegetation. In a paper published in 2019, University of Hawaii researcher­s wrote that 2016 was warmer than the 100-year mean by 92 degrees Celsius, and temperatur­es had been inching up by .19 Celsius per decade at the Mauna Loa Observator­y.

Hawaii’s landscape is changing in other ways, beyond becoming drier. As wildfires become more common, some native vegetation, which is poorly adapted to fire, has been destroyed. In other places, including the area around Lahaina, long-standing sugar cane farms stopped operating around the 1990s; the land stopped getting irrigated.

In the place of those crops and native vegetation, dry and invasive grasses spread. Those grasses that are better able to regrow after a fire, but are also quick to ignite. That has contribute­d to fires spreading more quickly.

“The landscape is just covered with flammable stuff,” said Ryan Longman, a research fellow at the EastWest Center, an educationa­l institutio­n. “All of the conditions just came together.”

The drying out of Hawaii’s landscape is part of a trend affecting rainforest­s around the world.

Rainforest­s are highly sensitive to changes in precipitat­ion. Higher temperatur­es, drought and changes in rain patterns stress trees. Their trunks dry up, and their leaves fall. Thinning canopy allows sun rays to reach the soil, causing it to dry up quickly.

Over decades, drought, heat, fire and deforestat­ion can force a rainforest to transition into dry grasslands, or savanna. Parts of the Amazon rainforest, the biggest in the world, are fast approachin­g this transition, a point of no return when the humid ecosystem would forever change.

Degraded forests and changing weather patterns combine to create perfect conditions for fires, often started by human activity, to grow into enormous, uncontroll­able blazes. In tropical forests, tree loss because of fire has grown 5% on average each year over the past 20 years, according to recent research.

Those underlying threats were amplified in Hawaii this past week by a separate threat: Hurricane Dora, which passed south of Hawaii as a Category 4 storm Tuesday. Although the storm was hundreds of miles off the coast of Maui, it contribute­d to wind speeds of greater than 60 mph, helping the fire to spread at a ferocious speed.

It’s difficult to directly attribute any single hurricane to climate change. But by increasing air and ocean temperatur­es, warming conditions make it more likely for large storms to gain strength.

“The massive winds, dry winds, are what drove this fire,” said Josh Stanbro, who served as chief resilience officer for Honolulu. “This is part of a long-term trend that is directly related to climate changes and impacts on the islands.”

 ?? MICHELLE MISHINA KUNZ/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? These groves of eucalyptus trees were burned in wildfires at the beginning of June 2021 in Pa’auilo, Hawaii.
MICHELLE MISHINA KUNZ/THE NEW YORK TIMES These groves of eucalyptus trees were burned in wildfires at the beginning of June 2021 in Pa’auilo, Hawaii.

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