Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumAuthor Of "Fire "Weather" - "We Are Going To Have To Let Go Of A Lot Of The 20th Century"
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KILEY BENSE: Can you talk about the connections between climate change and the fires in Los Angeles? What are the causes of these fires?
JOHN VAILLANT: Weve seen a lot of local [blame]: Its,Well, the governor didnt do this, and the mayor didnt do that, and that reservoir wasnt full. None of that would have made a bit of difference. Whenever those 100-mile-an-hour winds are blowing, it just doesnt matter whos in charge. Whos in charge is the wind; whos in charge is the fire. And who made it worse is human beings by burning fossil fuels at an extraordinary rate for 200 years straight.
My tendency is to look at things more systemically, and what climate change does is it takes naturally occurring phenomena and makes them more intense and more erratic, and also creates conditions for them to occur in places they didnt normally occur. We all know Southern California is flammable. Its part of the rhythm of this landscape. But they hadnt, historically, had to deal with fires of this intensity with this frequency. And so thats the other thing: these events are going to happen more and more often. California really is in a position to move the needle globally on climate change, because its the fifth biggest economy in the world. If California took a particular stance on petroleum, took a particular stance on building codes, took a particular stance on insurance coverage in dangerous environments, it could set the tune. This is an opportunity for Los Angeles to be a leader in building for the 21st century.
BENSE: Your book focuses on the fire that happened in Fort McMurray in 2016, another disaster in a landscape where fire is a natural part of the rhythms of the ecosystem. Do you see any other parallels between that fire and whats happening in California right now?
VAILLANT: They had two years of drought followed by record-breaking heat. And so an ordinary fire in Alberta turned into the worst fire in Canadian history. Here we had the hottest summer in Los Angeles history, followed by eight months of drought and, you could say, a freak wind event, but its historically possible. But again, the chances of such events occurring have been increased by climate change, by the heating and drying of the atmosphere. I see them as having almost identical causes: exceptional heat and drought took naturally occurring fires and made them catastrophic.
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https://insideclimatenews.org/news/16012025/fire-weather-author-john-vaillant-parallels-fort-mcmurray-los-angeles/
Irish_Dem
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