Thu. Apr 25th, 2024
A wildfire. Photo Credit: Quarrie photography

Lightning strikes and air contamination will likewise increment because of fierce blazes as indicated by the UNEP Frontiers report

Wildfires are predicted to worsen in the coming years and decades, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has warned in its annual Frontiers report released February 17, 2022.

This is the fourth edition of the Frontiers Report, which was first published in 2016 with an alert to the growing risk of zoonotic diseases, four years before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Wildfires are a natural phenomenon, but are becoming more dangerous and affecting larger areas. The UN report has attributed this to climate change and human activities.

“The trends towards more dangerous fire-weather conditions are likely to increase due to rising concentrations of atmospheric greenhouse gases and the attendant escalation of wildfire risk factors,” Inger Andersen, executive director, UNEP, said in her foreword.

Features of the report included-Urban noise pollution, wildfires and phenological shifts. The three topics of this Frontiers report are issues that highlight the urgent need to address the triple planetary crisis of climate change, pollution and biodiversity loss.

The increasing incidence of wildfires in California over the past 60 years. Source- Frontiers Report 2022, UNEP

What are the concerns highlighted in the report?

  • Wildfires are predicted to worsen in the coming years and decades. The trends towards more dangerous fire-weather conditions are likely to increase due to rising concentrations of atmospheric greenhouse gases and the attendant escalation of wildfire risk factors.
  • Vulnerable areas: There has been a rapid expansion of cities towards forest areas in many regions in recent decades. This wildland-urban interface is the area where wildfire risks are most pronounced. For example, rising fires in California, United States.
  • Lightning and pollution: With rising forest fires, the world is very likely to see more frequent incidences of lightning.
  • Fire-induced thunderstorms are a new danger posed by rising wildfires. These thunderstorms contribute to more dangerous conditions for fires on the ground.
  • Noise pollution in cities is a growing hazard to public health: Unwanted, prolonged and high-level sounds from road traffic, railways, or leisure activities impair human health and well-being.
  • Phenological shifts occur when species shift the timing of life cycle stages in response to changing environmental conditions altered by climate change. The concern is that interacting species in an ecosystem do not always shift the timing in the same direction or at the same rate.
  • These phenological shifts are increasingly disturbed by climate change, pushing plants and animals out of synch with their natural rhythms and leading to mismatches, such as when plants shift life cycle stages faster than herbivores.

 

The report also recommended the following to improve monitoring and management of wildfires:

  • Appreciating and adopting indigenous fire management techniques
  • Focus on long-range weather forecasting
  • Focus on remote-sensing capabilities such as satellites, ground-based radar, lightning detection as well as data handling.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *