Wildfires throughout the United States have become much less extensive in recent decades as the climate has warmed, reports a new climate summary at the website Climate at a Glance.
Climate at a Glance is designed to provide policymakers, educators, students, and the general public compelling one- or two-page summaries destroying common global warming myths.
Each summary begins with a few short bullet-points to concisely summarize the topic, followed by one or two explanatory paragraphs and an illustrative graphic.
According to the new summary on U.S. wildfires:
- Wildfires are far less frequent and severe than was the case throughout the first half of the 20th century.
- Occasional upticks in current wildfire activity still result in far less land burnt than was the case throughout the early 20th century.
- Even the worst recent wildfire years burned only 1/5 to 1/2 as much land as typical wildfire years during the early 20th century
- Drought is the key climate factor for wildfires. As shown in Climate at a Glance: Drought, the United States in recent decades is benefiting from strikingly small amounts of drought.
A full lineup of Climate-at-a-Glance summaries is available here. The U.S. Wildfires summary is available here.
Read more at Climate Realism
“Wildfires are far less frequent and severe than was the case throughout the first half of the 20th century”
Why was the first half of the 20th century, a particularly hot period known ETCW (early twentieth century warming) chosen as the reference period? Are skeptics now playing the same dishonest games that we accuse the other side of?
I just wish they would put all those Eco-Wackos on those fires and make them learn some real responsibility