Study Finds Amazon Fires Nearly 30 Times Likelier Due to Climate Change
Researchers found that the western Amazon, including areas in the Brazilian state of Amazonas, Perus Loreto department, and Bolivias La Paz and Beni departments, is now 20 to 28.5 times more prone to fire compared to a scenario without climate change.
September 23, 2024 by Mongabay
By Shanna Hanbury
Climate change is turning the humid rainforest of the western Amazon into an ecosystem nearly 30 times more prone to fire, according to the 2023-2024 State of Wildfires report. The study shows that between March 2023 and February 2024, rising temperatures, reduced rainfall, drier air and less resilient forests set up the region for a fire risk far greater than the forest would naturally experience.
Researchers found that the western Amazon, including areas in the Brazilian state of Amazonas, Perus Loreto department, and Bolivias La Paz and Beni departments, is now 20 to 28.5 times more prone to fire compared to a scenario without climate change. By comparison, the impact of climate change on fire risk in Canadas boreal forests, which burned an area nearly the size of Ireland in 2023, was threefold.
Were seeing really large numbers, and its shocking, but weve seen significant drying in the Amazon Basin, lead author Matthew Jones told Mongabay by phone. While climate change may have set the stage for last years fires, he added, it was human activity, such as large-scale criminal arson for land clearing and traditional use of fire escaping into larger expanses of forest, that ignited the flames.
Despite a 22% fall in deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon since President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva took power in January 2023, the region is still suffering from a surge of wildfires engulfing large swaths of the forest.
The El Niño-fueled 2023 Amazon drought was one of the most severe in recent history, causing water levels in rivers like the Solimões, Negro and Madeira to drop to their lowest in more than 120 years.
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