Canada's Forests Will Burn and Burn
2 hours ago
- #Wildfires
- #Boreal Forests
- #Climate Change
- Once wildfires start in Canada's boreal forests, they often become uncontrollable due to the vast area and limited resources.
- Climate change has increased the size and intensity of wildfires, with record-breaking seasons occurring recently, such as in 2023.
- Wildfire smoke affects air quality in distant cities like Toronto and New York, making smoky summers more common in eastern regions.
- Fires have led to evacuations, closures, and dangerous incidents, such as a train crew being surrounded by flames in Ontario.
- Wildfires are causing a decline in black spruce conifers and transforming vegetation, impacting forest ecosystems.
- Boreal forests, which store massive amounts of carbon, are becoming significant sources of greenhouse gases when they burn.
- Studies show carbon emissions from wildfires have increased by 60% in two decades, with Canadian fires contributing heavily.
- Large fires can generate extreme conditions like hurricane-force winds and pyrocumulus clouds, spreading smoke globally.
- Heat waves often coincide with wildfires, as seen in the 2021 Lytton fire following record-high temperatures.
- Wildfire smoke darkens glaciers, accelerating melting and creating feedback loops that exacerbate climate change.