The catastrophic fires that are sweeping Southern California are consistent
with what climate change models have been predicting for years, experts say, and
they may be just a prelude to many more such events in the future – as
vegetation grows heavier than usual and then ignites during prolonged drought
periods.
“This is exactly what we’ve been projecting to happen, both in short-term fire
forecasts for this year and the longer term patterns that can be linked to
global climate change,” said Ronald Neilson, a professor at Oregon State
University and bioclimatologist with the USDA Forest Service.
“You can’t look at one event such as this and say with certainty that it was
caused by a changing climate,” said Neilson, who was also a contributor to
publications of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a co-recipient
earlier this month of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize.
“But things just like this are consistent with what the latest modeling shows,”
Neilson said, “and may be another piece of evidence that climate change is a
reality, one with serious effects.”
The latest models, Neilson said, suggest that parts of the United States may be
experiencing longer-term precipitation patterns – less year-to-year variability,
but rather several wet years in a row followed by several that are drier than
normal.
“As the planet warms, more water is getting evaporated from the oceans and all
that water has to come down somewhere as precipitation,” said Neilson. “That can
lead, at times, to heavier vegetation loads popping up and creation of a
tremendous fuel load. But the warmth and other climatic forces are also going to
create periodic droughts. If you get an ignition source during these periods,
the fires can just become explosive.”
The problems can be compounded, Neilson said, by El Niño or La Nina events. A La
Niña episode that’s currently under way is probably amplifying the Southern
California drought, he said. But when rains return for a period of years, the
burned vegetation may inevitably re-grow to very dense levels.
“In the future, catastrophic fires such as those going on now in California may
simply be a normal part of the landscape,” said Neilson.
Fire forecast models developed by Neilson’s research group at OSU and the Forest
Service rely on several global climate models. When combined, they accurately
predicted both the Southern California fires that are happening and the drought
that has recently hit parts of the Southeast, including Georgia and Florida,
causing crippling water shortages.
In studies released five years ago, Neilson and other OSU researchers predicted
that the American West could become both warmer and wetter in the coming
century, conditions that would lead to repeated, catastrophic fires larger than
any in recent history.
At that time, the scientists suggested that periodic increases in precipitation,
in combination with higher temperatures and rising carbon dioxide levels, would
spur vegetation growth and add even further to existing fuel loads caused by
decades of fire suppression.
Droughts or heat waves, the researchers said in 2002, would then lead to levels
of wildfire larger than most observed since European settlement. The projections
were based on various “general circulation” models that showed both global
warming and precipitation increases during the 21st century.