In the push for
strong action at this year's United Nations climate change conference in Katowice,
Poland, a common refrain is that rising carbon dioxide levels (CO2) will
supposedly result in global warming that will increase the incidence of
disastrous wildfires.
“The longer we wait, the more our communities will suffer under bigger wildfires...,” wrote Lou Leonard of the World Wildlife Fund on December 4.
“The longer we wait, the more our communities will suffer under bigger wildfires...,” wrote Lou Leonard of the World Wildlife Fund on December 4.
This is totally wrong, but then World Wildlife Fund got their recent claims of animal populations wrong as well.
Rising
temperatures and increasing CO2 both act to increase soil moisture and so
reduce the potential of fires. When temperatures rise, evaporation increases,
causing more precipitation which increases soil moisture and so lessens fire
risk. As CO2 rises, stomata, the pores in plant’s leaves, are open for shorter
lengths of time. Plants therefore lose less water to the air and so more of it
stays in the soil, again reducing fire potential.
Due to these
factors, as well as the fact that we now put out fires that would have burned
for weeks in centuries past, there has been a significant reduction in forest
fires over the past 100 years. In fact, analysis of sediment cores off the
Pacific coast of Canada reveals that the incidence of wildfires has reduced
since Europeans settled in North America.
Regardless, a
closer look at the issue reveals that fire has benefits as well as risk.
Fire has allowed
humans to live in areas where the climate would normally preclude our survival.
It allowed us to cook and soften food that was ordinarily indigestible. In many
areas, people set fires under controlled conditions to drive game into traps. A
classic example was the grassfires used to drive bison over cliffs to provide
food such as at Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump in Alberta.
Fire is also an essential
part of the natural cycle. It clears off dead debris as plants go through their
lifecycle. There is a special area of botany called Fire Ecology that studies
the role and importance of fire in ecosystems. In most ecologies, especially
forests, many plants require fire to soften or open the seeds to start life,
although the seed shell must survive the fire first.
One example of
such a seed occurs in the vegetation of what is called a Mediterranean climate.
California is an example of this type. It is a unique climate zone because 70
percent of the precipitation occurs in the winter. All other climate types have
either 70 percent in summer or even distribution throughout the year.
A Mediterranean
climate results in a unique vegetation called Maquis in Europe and Chaparral in
California. The annual climate cycle that makes this an area that requires fire
to be healthy has a hot, dry, summer that shrivels the plant but the seeds
survive. At the end of the summer, lightning occurs as rain clouds begin to form
and that triggers fires that burn off the plants but leave many of the seeds
intact. Mudslides follow as the rainy season progresses. Fortunately, the seeds
germinate quickly and stabilize the soil.
The natural cycle
of forest fires creates what are called crown fires. They move through quickly,
burning off dead debris but leaving most of the plants still alive. When
governments decided to stop forest fires, they upset the natural dynamics
completely. The bureaucracies, now populated by graduates of the biased
environmental education system, willingly allowed the environmental extremists’
demands to end the former sensible practice of cleaning the undergrowth.
Activists complained that such forest tending was not ‘natural,’ when it was,
in fact, a reasonable facsimile of ‘nature’.
So, the debris
built up, leaving the forest a tinder box all ready to ignite. Making matters
worse, when a fire takes hold, it now often creates what is referred to as a
base fire. These fires are very difficult to extinguish—the heat allows such
fires to burn into the ground and, days after a fire is supposedly out, it will
flare up again.
We must recognize
the value of fire in nature. Extreme environmentalists and the new young
bureaucrats with their ideological tunnel vision get it all wrong. And, the
light at the of the tunnel is another deadly forest fire, not caused by global
warming or CO2 rise, but by gross stupidity.
Dr. Tim Ball is an
environmental consultant and former climatology professor at the University of
Winnipeg in Manitoba. Tom Harris is executive director of the Ottawa, Canada-based
International Climate Science Coalition.
2 comments:
Isn't it odd, that all these predictions of DOOM are developed from short term data, last 20 - 30 - 50 - even 100 years is short in terms of climate. How when we point to a COLDEST WINTER on RECORD, in a catalogue of colder and colder winters....we are focused on WEATHER, a cold snap. However, a single hot summer, originally reported as the hottest since 1974 - 75 quickly becomes the hottest in decades -> on record -> a demonstration of HUMAN caused global warming....It really is the Emperors new cloths and chicken little wrapped into one.
I cannot understand why the emphasis and propaganda focus's on CO2 reduction. It is an essential gas for the earths survival. it does not cause the earth to heat up but merely follows a natural cycle after the oceans warm.Look at the graphs!
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