Climate change intensified eastern Canada's hot, dry, windy weather this summer. That made Quebec's enormous burns about twice as likely, according to a new study.
Scientists like Girardin expect human-driven climate change, in tandem with decades or centuries of forest management decisions that in some cases increase fire risk, to push modern fires to the edge of those historic bounds.This summer, fires have burned an area roughly the size of Florida. That's more than twice as much as the next-most destructive season, 1989.
Indigenous communities have been hit the hardest in many of the fire zones. At one point in July, 75% of those under evacuation orders were Indigenous, says Dorothy Heinrich, a disaster risk expert at the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Center in the Netherlands, who was involved in the study. "What we're seeing this year is the signal of what we were anticipating to happen maybe 20 years from now," says Girardin.
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Some of Canada's wildfires likely made worse by human-driven climate changeClimate change intensified eastern Canada's hot, dry, windy weather this summer. That made Quebec's enormous burns about twice as likely, according to a new study.
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Some of Canada's wildfires likely made worse by human-driven climate changeClimate change intensified eastern Canada's hot, dry, windy weather this summer. That made Quebec's enormous burns about twice as likely, according to a new study.
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Climate change made Eastern Canada wildfires twice as likely, scientists sayThe fires that tore through the Canadian province of Quebec between May and July were made at least twice as likely by climate change, scientists said on Tuesday.
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Climate change made record-setting Canada wildfires more likely, scientists sayMore than twice as many acres have burned so far this year than the previous highest year on record.
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Weather that drove eastern Canada's devastating wildfires made twice as likely by climate changeThe weather conditions that fueled record-shattering wildfires in eastern Canada earlier this summer – and sent plumes of hazardous air into the US – were made more likely and more intense by the climate crisis, according to a new report published Tuesday.
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