WILDFIRES
Wildfires Are Burning 5 Million Acres in Siberia
and Eastern Russia
Olivia RosaneMay. 04, 2020 08:22AM EST
Wildfires
in Siberia and the Russian Far East are as much as 10 times worse compared to
this time last year, as the climate crisis and the coronavirus pandemic join
forces to fan the flames.
As of April
27, ten times the amount of land was on fire in the Krasnoyarsk region compared
to the same time last year, The Siberian Times reported. In Transbaikal,
meanwhile, three times as much land was burning, and in the Amur region, there
were 1.5 times as many fires.
"A
critical situation with fires has developed in Siberia and the Far East,"
Emergencies Minister Evgeny Zinichev said in a video conference with Russian
President Vladimir Putin reported by The Siberian Times.
Experts and
agencies outside Russia have also reported on the extent of the fires. London
School of Economics geographer Thomas Smith told Earther that around five
million acres of Russian forest and grassland were on fire, and the largest
fire was one million acres total, around the size of Glacier National Park.
The
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) also captured the fires
from space April 27.
"On
April 23, 2020, strong winds helped to push fires set by locals to dry grass
out of control," NASA wrote. "The regions of Kemerovo and Novosibirsk
among others have been the hardest hit to date. Nine Siberian regions have been
affected by these wildfires. Clouds of smoke have swept across the Siberian
landscape."
In
Novosibirsk, around 50 homes were burned and in Kemerovo, 27, The Siberian
Times reported.
Human
activity provides the immediate spark for the fires. Farmers burn dry grass
even though the practice was banned in 2015, and, this year, the coronavirus
lockdown has made the situation worse.
"People
self-isolated outdoors and forgot about fire safety rules," Russian
forestry chief Sergei Anoprienko told The Siberian Times. "In some
regions, the temperature is already around 30C, and people just can't keep
themselves in their apartments. People rushed outdoors, and as a result we have
a surge of thermal points."
But human
activity is also behind the conditions that make the fires more likely. Russia
is warming 2.5 times faster than the rest of the planet, and last winter was so
warm that Moscow had to truck in artificial snow for a New Year's display, The
Guardian reported. Wildfires in Siberia in summer 2019 got so bad that the
government was forced to declare a state of emergency. The fires came as June
2019 temperatures in Siberia were almost ten degrees Celsius warmer than
average. 2020 is now shaping up to be a difficult fire year as well.
"A
less snowy winter, an abnormal winter, and insufficient soil moisture are
factors that create the conditions for the transition of landscape fires to
settlements," Zinichev told The Siberian Times. He also said unusually hot
weather was combining with strong winds to fan the flames.
2020 could
be a bad year for wildfires across the globe, Earther pointed out. The Amazon's
fire season could be worse than last year's and California only got half of its
normal precipitation this winter.
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