查看原文
其他

2020, Fieriest Year

留学杂志 2021-03-12

While people in the West are suffering through record-breaking heat, wildfires are ravaging many areas, especially in California, and red-flag warnings have been issued from the Northwest into the Rockies. 


by CNN

There were at least 77 large complexes of wildfires burning in 15 states across the country -- almost a third of them in California, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.

The fires have burned at least 649,054 acres in the 14 states where fires are still spreading, according to the NIFC.

Some 45 million people remain under some sort of heat warning or advisories, and no reprieve from the record heat in the West is expected until the weekend.

Most of California and some surrounding areas are under an excessive heat warning from the National Weather Service.

Here's where the largest of the fires have been reported as of Tuesday evening, according to the NIFC, which counts area fires as complexes, not single fires. These numbers will be updated as soon as new data is available.


Wildfires will be more common 

in a warming world


CALIFORNIA BURNS every year. But amid a record-breaking heatwave, 2020 is the fieriest year yet. As The news press, more than 7,600 fires had burned over 2.5m acres (1m hectares) of land. The season still has months to run.

California wildfires map, by latimes 


That fits a long-term trend, for California’s wildfires are getting steadily worse. Blazes in the 2010s burned 6.8m acres on average, up from 3.3m acres in the 1990s. The fire season lasts nearly three months longer now than it did in the 1970s. Over the past decade, the state has spent an average of $3.7bn a year fighting fires. 


 “wildland-urban interface” (WUI)

The reason is a double whammy of climate change and development. 

More homes are being built next to forests, in what experts call the “wildland-urban interface” (WUI). A 2018 study estimated that roughly a third of American homes were in the WUI. The problem is acute in California. Pricey housing has pushed people onto cheaper land close to the wilderness.



 Climate change

At the same time, climate change is extending the dry season, which stores up fuel for fires

In California, a chronic “megadrought”—in which dry years become more common and wet ones scarcer—is making matters even worse. One paper, citing tree-ring data, concluded that the drought, which started around 2000, is the second-worst in the past 1,200 years. It, too, has been linked to climate change.



reduce the risk of 

catastrophic blazes

“It’s not that different to building on an earthquake-prone landscape,” says Max Moritz, a wildfire expert at the University of California at Santa Barbara. 

Buildings and communities can be built in such a way that fires sweep through them—or better still, around them—leaving them more-or-less intact. 

Infrastructure can be made more resilient. And forests themselves can be managed to reduce the risk of catastrophic blazes.

Experts recommend a five-foot “non-combustible zone” around the base of homes.




来源:CNN、latimes、Economist,图片来源于网络,如侵删。


记者:长谣监制:李璨
责任编辑:戴晨


·END·
 

扫描二维码

订阅杂志


微信号:liuxuezazhi






首发|美国驻华大使泰里·布兰斯塔德召开卸任发布会
最新!教育部关于取消 《留学回国人员证明》的公告
留学泰国 | 来微笑之国领略东南亚风情【人物专访 | 留学三缺一】西班牙留学海归的“领航员”官宣 | 教育部:以中外合作办学方式丰富就学路径


扫描二维码

关注

【留学事务所】

微信公众平台

点击下方图片,了解留学杂志↓↓↓

联系我们

读者热线:400-803-1977

商务合作WeChat:zuiyaojing


关注留学行业最新消息

客观深入报道行业事件

提供有价值的优质服务

想你所想 为你而来


入驻光明网、网易、腾讯、今日头条、一点资讯等各大平台





    您可能也对以下帖子感兴趣

    文章有问题?点此查看未经处理的缓存