4.6 Article

Attribution of the role of climate change in the forest fires in Sweden 2018

期刊

NATURAL HAZARDS AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES
卷 21, 期 7, 页码 2169-2179

出版社

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/nhess-21-2169-2021

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资金

  1. Belmont Forum Project PREREAL [292-2015-11-30-13-43-09]
  2. Canadian National Research Council - Canada [DDG-2015-00026]
  3. Swedish Research Council FORMAS [239-2014-1866]
  4. Swedish Institute network of CLIMECO [100662017-13]
  5. NSF [AGS-0856145]
  6. Bureau of Reclamation [R16AC00039]
  7. Regional and Global Model Analysis (RGMA), Earth and Environmental System Modelling Program of the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Biological and Environmental Research (BER) [DE-FC02-97ER62402]
  8. Nordic Forest Research (SNS)
  9. consortium GDRI Cold Forests
  10. Swedish Institute network of BalticFire [24474/2018]
  11. ERA4CS project SERV_FORFIRE

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Analyzing the forest fires that occurred in Sweden in the summer of 2018 from a meteorological perspective, it was found that the main factor contributing to increased fire risk is rising temperatures. Climate models predict a significant increase in the risk of such events in the future due to global warming.
In this study, we analyse the role of climate change in the forest fires that raged through large parts of Sweden in the summer of 2018 from a meteorological perspective. This is done by studying the Canadian Fire Weather Index (FWI) based on sub-daily data, both in reanalysis data sets (ERA-Interim, ERA5, the Japanese 55 year Reanalysis, JRA-55, and Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications version 2, MERRA-2) and three large-ensemble climate models (EC-Earth, weather@home, W@H, and Community Earth System Model, CESM) simulations. The FWI, based on reanalysis, correlates well with the observed burnt area in summer (r = 0.6 to 0.8). We find that the maximum FWI in July 2018 had return times of similar to 24 years (90% CI, confidence interval, > 10 years) for southern and northern Sweden. Furthermore, we find a negative trend of the FWI for southern Sweden over the 1979 to 2017 time period in the reanalyses, yielding a non-significant reduced probability of such an event. However, the short observational record, large uncertainty between the reanalysis products and large natural variability of the FWI give a large confidence interval around this number that easily includes no change, so we cannot draw robust conclusions from reanalysis data. The three large-ensembles with climate models point to a roughly 1.1 (0.9 to 1.4) times increased probability (non-significant) for such events in the current climate relative to preindustrial climate. For a future climate (2 degrees C warming), we find a roughly 2 (1.5 to 3) times increased probability for such events relative to the preindustrial climate. The increased fire weather risk is mainly attributed to the increase in temperature. The other main factor, i.e. precipitation during summer months, is projected to increase for northern Sweden and decrease for southern Sweden. We, however, do not find a clear change in prolonged dry periods in summer months that could explain the increased fire weather risk in the climate models. In summary, we find a (non-significant) reduced probability of such events based on reanalyses, a small (nonsignificant) increased probability due to global warming up to now and a more robust (significant) increase in the risk for such events in the future based on the climate models.

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