PARIS: The frequency and intensity of extreme wildfires has more than doubled worldwide over the past two decades as human activity has warmed the planet, said a new study published on Monday.
For the first time, researchers were able to plot a global trend for the most destructive types of fires responsible for major economic damage and loss to animal and human life. The study was published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution.
Using satellite records, they studied nearly 3,000 wildfires of tremendous “radiative power” between 2003 to 2023 and established a 2.2-fold increase in their occurrence over that period. The intensity of the 20 most extreme blazes in each year had also more than doubled -- a rate that “appears to be accelerating”, the study said.
“I expected to see some increase, but the rate of increase alarmed me,” said the study´s lead author Calum Cunningham from the University of Tasmania in Australia. “The effects of climate change are no longer just something of the future. We are now witnessing the manifestation of a drying and heating atmosphere,” he told AFP by email.
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