Global increase in wildfire potential from compound fire weather and drought
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere · Texas A&M University
Abstract
Abstract Wildfire can cause significant adverse impacts to society and the environment. Weather and climate play an important role in modulating wildfire activity. We explore the joint occurrence of global fire weather and meteorological drought using a compound events framework. We show that, for much of the globe, burned area increases when periods of heightened fire weather compound with dry antecedent conditions. Regions associated with wildfire disasters, such as southern Australia and the western USA, are prone to experiencing years of compound drought and fire weather. Such compound events have increased in frequency for much of the globe, driven primarily by increases in fire weather rather than…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 24.00
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 141
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- Environmental science
- Meteorology
- Climatology
- Atmospheric sciences
- Geography
- Geology
- Climate action