4.7 Article

Climate change is increasing the likelihood of extreme autumn wildfire conditions across California

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 15, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ab83a7

Keywords

climate change; attribution; wildfires; california; CMIP5; global warming

Funding

  1. Stanford University
  2. Department of Energy
  3. Institute of the Environment and Sustainability at the University of California, Los Angeles
  4. Center for Climate and Weather Extremes at the National Center for Atmospheric Research
  5. Nature Conservancy of California
  6. National Science Foundation [DMS-1520873]
  7. Zegar Family Foundation

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California has experienced devastating autumn wildfires in recent years. These autumn wildfires have coincided with extreme fire weather conditions during periods of strong offshore winds coincident with unusually dry vegetation enabled by anomalously warm conditions and late onset of autumn precipitation. In this study, we quantify observed changes in the occurrence and magnitude of meteorological factors that enable extreme autumn wildfires in California, and use climate model simulations to ascertain whether these changes are attributable to human-caused climate change. We show that state-wide increases in autumn temperature (similar to 1 degrees C) and decreases in autumn precipitation (similar to 30%) over the past four decades have contributed to increases in aggregate fire weather indices (+20%). As a result, the observed frequency of autumn days with extreme (95th percentile) fire weather-which we show are preferentially associated with extreme autumn wildfires-has more than doubled in California since the early 1980s. We further find an increase in the climate model-estimated probability of these extreme autumn conditions since similar to 1950, including a long-term trend toward increased same-season co-occurrence of extreme fire weather conditions in northern and southern California. Our climate model analyses suggest that continued climate change will further amplify the number of days with extreme fire weather by the end of this century, though a pathway consistent with the UN Paris commitments would substantially curb that increase. Given the acute societal impacts of extreme autumn wildfires in recent years, our findings have critical relevance for ongoing efforts to manage wildfire risks in California and other regions.

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