Climate change was a major factor behind the hot, dry weather that gave rise to the devastating LA fires, a scientific study has confirmed.
It made those weather conditions about 35% more likely, according to World Weather Attribution – globally recognised for their studies linking extreme weather to climate change.
The authors noted that the LA wildfire season is getting longer while the rains that normally put out the blazes have reduced.
The scientists highlight that these wildfires are highly complex with multiple factors playing a role, but they are confident that a warming climate is making LA more prone to intense fire events.
Another key element is drought.
Dry conditions in the LA area over the October to December period are now about 2.4 times more likely than before humans starting using fossil fuels on a large scale.
The researchers are clear that climate change increased the probability of the hot, dry conditions that gave rise to the fires.
However, the authors are more cautious about the link between rising temperatures and the longer fire season or decreased rainfall, saying that the models did not show a significant connection.
Despite these reservations, the conclusion is that a warmer world increased the chances of the devastating wildfires occurring – as more fossil fuels continue to be burnt, those chances will continue to rise.
“Overall the paper finds that climate change has made the Los Angeles fires more likely despite some statistical uncertainty,” said Prof Gabi Hegerl, from the University of Edinburgh, who was not part of the study team.
“This is a carefully researched result that should be taken seriously,” she said in a statement.
The new work builds on research that was published while the fires were still burning fiercely.
That study linked the wildfires to what’s termed “climate whiplash.”
The idea is that very wet years are followed almost immediately by very dry ones, which increases the risk of fires.
This is what happened in LA, when two wet winters were followed by an extremely dry autumn and winter this year – the wet weather promoted the growth of grass and shrubs that became the fuel for the fires that took off in the gusting Santa Ana winds.
Matt McGrath
Sources from: BBC.COM