An astronaut aboard the International Space Station
photographed wildfire smoke from Nova Scotia billowing over the Atlantic Ocean
in May 2023. Warm weather and lack of rain fueled blazes across Canada last
year, burning 5% of the country’s forests.
NASA
Extreme wildfires like these will continue to have a large impact on global
climate.
Stoked by Canada’s warmest and
driest conditions in decades, extreme forest fires in 2023 released about 640
million metric tons of carbon, NASA scientists have found. That’s comparable in
magnitude to the annual fossil fuel emissions of a large industrialized nation.
NASA funded the study as part of its ongoing mission to understand our changing
planet.
The research team used satellite observations and advanced computing to quantify the carbon emissions of the fires, which burned an area roughly the size of North Dakota from May to September 2023. The new study, published on Aug. 28 in the journal Nature, was led by scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.
Carbon monoxide from Canada wildfires curls thousands
of miles across North America in this animation showing data from summer 2023.
Lower concentrations are shown in purple; higher concentrations are in yellow.
Red triangles indicate fire hotspots.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
They found that the Canadian fires released more carbon in five months than
Russia or Japan emitted from fossil fuels in all of 2022 (about 480 million and
291 million metric tons, respectively). While the carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted
from both wildfires and fossil fuel combustion cause extra warming immediately,
there’s an important distinction, the scientists noted. As the forest regrows,
the amount of carbon emitted from fires will be reabsorbed by Earth’s
ecosystems. The CO2 emitted from the burning of fossil fuels is not readily
offset by any natural processes.
An ESA (European Space Agency)
instrument designed to measure air pollution observed the fire plumes over
Canada. The TROPOspheric
Monitoring Instrument, or TROPOMI, flies aboard the Sentinel 5P satellite, which has been
orbiting Earth since 2017. TROPOMI has four spectrometers that measure and map
trace gases and fine particles (aerosols) in the atmosphere.
The scientists started with the end
result of the fires: the amount of carbon monoxide (CO) in the atmosphere
during the fire season. Then they “back-calculated” how large the emissions
must have been to produce that amount of CO. They were able to estimate how
much CO2 was released based on ratios between the two gases in the fire plumes.
“What we found was that the fire
emissions were bigger than anything in the record for Canada,” said Brendan
Byrne, a JPL scientist and lead author of the new study. “We wanted to
understand why.”
Warmest
Conditions Since at Least 1980
Wildfire is essential to the health
of forests, clearing undergrowth and brush and making way for new plant life.
In recent decades, however, the number, severity, and overall size of wildfires have increased, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Contributing factors include extended drought, past fire management strategies,
invasive species, and the spread of residential communities into formerly less
developed areas.
To explain why Canada’s fire season
was so intense in 2023, the authors of the new study cited tinderbox conditions
across its forests. Climate data revealed the warmest and driest fire season
since at least 1980. Temperatures in the northwest part of the country — where
61% of fire emissions occurred — were more than 4.5 degrees Fahrenheit (2.6
degrees Celsius) above average from May through September. Precipitation was
also more than 3 inches (8 centimeters) below average for much of the year.
Driven in large part by these
conditions, many of the fires grew to enormous sizes. The fires were also unusually widespread, charring some 18 million hectares of forest from British Columbia in the
west to Quebec and the Atlantic provinces in the east. The area of land that
burned was more than eight times the 40-year average and accounted for 5% of
Canadian forests.
“Some climate models project that
the temperatures we experienced last year will become the norm by the 2050s,”
Byrne said. “The warming, coupled with lack of moisture, is likely to trigger
fire activity in the future.”
If events like the 2023 Canadian forest fires become more typical, they could impact global climate. That’s because Canada’s vast forests compose one of the planet’s important carbon sinks, meaning that they absorb more CO2 from the atmosphere than they release. The scientists said that it remains to be seen whether Canadian forests will continue to absorb carbon at a rapid rate or whether increasing fire activity could offset some of the uptake, diminishing the forests’ capacity to forestall climate warming.
Source: New NASA Study Tallies Carbon Emissions From Massive Canadian Fires - NASA
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