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‘Off the chart’: CO2 from California fires dwarf state’s fossil fuel emissions

A firefighter battling blazes in California. Image by NOAA / Creative Commons.

  • This year’s fires in California have already burned through 1.4 million hectares (3.4 million acres) of land, and the fire season isn’t set to end for at least a couple of months.
  • As of Sept. 15, the fires had generated more than 91 million metric tons of carbon dioxide, which is about 25% of the state’s annual emissions from fossil fuels.
  • Higher carbon emissions contribute to a multipart climate feedback, accelerating climate change which then sets the stage for more fires that will emit an increasing amount of carbon dioxide, experts say.

California is burning with a ferocity never seen before in the Golden State. So far this year, fires have burned through more than 1.4 million hectares (3.4 million acres) of land — about half the size of Belgium — according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. What’s more, it’s only mid-September, and the region’s normal fire season usually lasts until somewhere in November.

Along with the flames comes a rapid rise in carbon dioxide emissions, which, in turn, will accelerate climate change events that are fueling the current fires, experts say.

Map showing California fire incidents in 2020 as of September 18. Image by Cal Fire.

It’s estimated that the 2020 California wildfires have already generated more than 91 million metric tons of CO2 (as of Sept. 15), according to data from the Global Fire Emissions Database (GFED). That’s about 25% of the annual emissions from fossil fuels in the state, Niels Andela, an atmospheric scientist from Cardiff University in the U.K., told Mongabay.

“This year is really, really off the chart,” Andela said. “We estimate … that this is the highest year we have on our record, at least.

“In ideal conditions when those forests are able to regrow, they will eventually reabsorb those emissions again, although that may take many decades … but for some of those forests, it might be really hard to fully recover,” he added.

Graph showing estimated fire-caused carbon dioxide emissions in California in 2020. Image by GFED.
Chart illustrating California’s high carbon emissions due to fire in 2020. Image by NASA.

While the California fires are small in comparison to the fires in the Amazon — a region 13 times as big as the U.S. state — CO2 emissions from the California fires are already about 14% of the CO2 emissions from the Amazon fires in 2019.

Nancy Harris, research manager of Global Forest Watch, said what’s particularly concerning about the California fire CO2 emissions is that it contributes to a multipart climate feedback system that will exacerbate the effects of climate change.

“The emissions are not happening in isolation,” Harris told Mongabay. “They’re part of this larger feedback loop — more emissions causes climate change, which causes more emissions, which causes increasing temperatures. So we’re sort of stuck in this vicious cycle of increasing temperatures, and as the trees and vegetation dry out, [they are] more flammable and susceptible to burning which causes more emissions, which then increases temperatures even further.

Fires and climate feedback loop. Image by Global Forest Watch.

“There’s a time dimension to all of this,” she added. “The climate system takes a while to adjust to any change, either positive or negative, and so even if we cut off the fossil fuel pumps tomorrow, there will be some remnant climate change [effects] that will come just because of what’s happened already. But that’s not to say that we are not able to turn the ship.”

Globally, CO2 levels have already reached 414 parts per million (ppm), and signs suggest the number will continue to soar, largely due to human activities such as deforestation, fossil fuel burning, and human-caused climate change events like the California wildfires.

As California enters a new era of climate uncertainty in which cataclysmic fires could be the new “normal,” Harris says that people can minimize fire risk by choosing not to live in the wildland-urban interface (WUI), areas that are identified as fire hazard zones due to the presence of flammable vegetation.

“I think we need to be smart about where we build and rebuild our communities,” Harris said. “[C]limate change is happening, and if we want to reduce these fires, that’s one tangible way that we can help.”

Correction (10/07/2021): This article was corrected to say that the fires generated more than 91 million metric tons of carbon dioxide (until Sept. 15), which is about 25% of the state’s annual emissions from fossil fuels — not 25% more than the state’s annual emissions.

Banner image caption: A firefighter battling blazes in California. Image by NOAA / Creative Commons. 

Elizabeth Claire Alberts is a staff writer for Mongabay. Follow her on Twitter @ECAlberts.

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