Tag Archives: Global Warming

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Does climate change result in an increase of wildfires?

As the temperatures get warmer and the days start getting longer, you may be excited for the summer season to start. However, the arrival of summer also means dryer weather, water shortages, and wildfires.

Poor air quality in Vancouver due to the raging wildfires.         Photo Source: flickr

Wildfires can occur anywhere, but are most prevalent in the forests of Canada, the United States, Europe, and throughout the vegetated areas of Australia and South Africa. These wildfires are capable of destroying entire areas of up to 2.5 million hectare per year in Canada and can travel at speeds of 23 kilometers per hour! The main causes of wildfires are lightning and humans (surprise!), with lightning caused fires making up 45% of all fires and 55% of all fires being connected to human activities.

Historical wildfires across Canada. Photo Source: Natural Resources Canada

Although lightning caused wildfires occur naturally every year and are essential for the environment, wildfires should still be a concern for all of us. The smog that visits Vancouver every summer seems more severe year after year, could climate change be increasing the occurrence of wildfires?

According to science, climate change does result in an increase of wildfires. Climate change is the result of human activities, such as, fossil fuel burning, which produces large quantities of carbon dioxide. Just like methane and ozone, carbon dioxide is also a heat-trapping molecule, which you might know as a greenhouse gas. With greenhouse gas concentrations increasing, the heat radiated from earth cannot leave earth’s atmosphere. Over 90 percent of this trapped heat accumulates in the ocean and as a consequence, ocean heat contents rise and cause increases in global ocean temperatures. The increase in global heat content also causes ice to melt and sea levels to rise.

Global ocean heat content (OHC) for the top 2000 m of the ocean. Uncertainty estimates are shown in pink. Source: Science Advances

Aside from an increase in global ocean temperatures and higher sea levels, temperatures on land are also raised due to the trapping of heat by greenhouse gases. This results in more droughts and dryer weather, which are perfect conditions for wildfires to pick up.

So, other than knowing the reason for an increase in wildfires, how can we do our best to prevent wildfires from occurring?

First of all, always obey fire bans and signs that indicate the wildfire danger ratings. Next, never leave a campfire unattended & completely extinguish the campfire when leaving the area. Furthermore, any smoking material should be properly disposed of and most importantly, be sure to report any signs of wildfires.

Hydroelectricity: A Temporary Band-aid

Global temperature averages are increasing at abnormal rates. Sea levels are rising, ice caps are melting, and nature is dying. Almost all governments and scientists worldwide have been looking for solutions to impede the fate that humanity is heading towards. One of the ways is through using a cleaner energy source such as hydroelectricity.

In the past two decades, hydroelectricity has become more popular as a substitution for fossil fuel powered energy production. Its claim to fame was that it was a clean way to generate electricity; it was a viable solution for the future as climate change started to become a mainstay in the news. Initial studies had hydroelectricity being almost emission free!

Vattenfall Study for Carbon Emissions of Fossil Fuels, Renewables, Nuclear. Source: Wikimedia Commons

However, hydroelectricity was also declared a part of the greenhouse gas problem.

When thinking about producing electricity using water, one would think of it as being a clean and renewable process. It’s water! People bathe in it and drink it. How can it be dirty?

Unlike coal, a non-renewable resource which takes millions of years to form, the water isn’t being burned or used up. However, like coal , it is not clean (albeit to a much lesser extent).

Clean water for drinking. Source: kisspng

The basics of hydro-power is that water is pumped through a turbine to induce spinning. This motion activates a generator, producing the electricity which has become so important in daily life. The dirty part comes from the carbon emissions generated during construction and passively during the hydroelectric dam’s lifetime.

Typical hydroelectric dam. Source: United States Geological Survey (USGS)

Throughout the building process, many carbon sinks will be destroyed as trees and plants will be chopped down. This reduces the overall carbon dioxide that can be stored while releasing the carbon dioxide back into the atmosphere. Not to mention the habitats and the environments near the power plants that are destroyed at the same time.

Hydroelectric dam construction by China. Source: Giorgio Taraschi / Al Jazeera

However, it’s not just during the initial construction that hydroelectric power is unclean. Plants and other living things are able to grow in these bodies of water.  All living things that die and decompose in the waters produce methane, carbon dioxide, and nutrients. The nutrients in turn help other living organisms grow, thus continuing the cycle. When thought about in this manner, the hydroelectric dams become carbon emission generators.

In its current state, hydroelectricity is not a clean source of power. Nevertheless, it is a viable alternative to fossil fuels as we transition to better solutions. There is hope in the future that hydro-power becomes one of these solutions. Companies are still innovating and working towards a setup that is gentler on the environment while still providing adequate amounts of electricity.