Study
finds global increase in hot, dry days ideal for wildfires
Dangerous
days have nearly tripled in past 45 years – and increase largely driven by
human-made warming
Associated
Press
Wed 18
Feb 2026 17.41 EST
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/feb/18/study-wildfires-danger
The
number of days when the weather gets hot, dry and windy – ideal to spark
extreme wildfires – has nearly tripled in the past 45 years across the globe,
with the trend increasing even higher in the Americas, a new study shows.
And more
than half of that increase is caused by human-caused climate change,
researchers calculated.
What this
means is that as the world warms, more places across the globe are prone to
wildfires because of increasingly synchronous fire weather, which is when
multiple places have the right conditions to go up in smoke.
Countries
may not have enough resources to put out all the fires, and help will not be as
likely to come from neighbors busy with their own flames, according to the
authors of a study in Wednesday’s Science Advances.
In 1979
and for the next 15 years, the world averaged 22 synchronous fire weather days
a year for flames that stayed within large global regions, the study found. In
2023 and 2024, it was up to more than 60 days a year.
“These
sorts of changes that we have seen increase the likelihood in a lot of areas
that there will be fires that are going to be very challenging to suppress,”
said study co-author John Abatzoglou, a fire scientist at the University of
California, Merced.
The
researchers did not look at fires but weather conditions: warm, with strong
winds and dry air and ground.
“It
increases the likelihood of widespread fire outbreaks, but the weather is one
dimension,” said study lead author Cong Yin, a fire researcher at University of
California, Merced. The other big ingredients to fires are oxygen, fuel such as
trees and brush, and ignition such as lightning or arson or human accidents.
This
study is important because extreme fire weather is the primary – but not only –
factor in increasing fire impacts across the globe, said fire scientist Mike
Flannigan of Thompson Rivers University in Canada, who wasn’t part of the
study. And it’s also important because regions that used to have fire seasons
at different times and could share resources are now overlapping, he said.
Abatzoglou
said: “And that’s where things begin to break.”
More than
60% of the global increase in synchronous fire weather days can be attributed
to climate change from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas, Yin said. He
and his colleagues know this because they used computer simulations to compare
what has happened in the past 45 years with a fictional world without the
increased greenhouse gases from burning fossil fuels.
The
continental US, from 1979 to 1988, averaged 7.7 synchronous fire weather days a
year. But in the last 10 years that average was up to 38 days a year, according
to Yin.
But that
is nothing compared to the southern half of South America. That region averaged
5.5 synchronous fire weather days a year from 1979 to 1988; over the last
decade, that’s risen to 70.6 days a year, including 118 days in 2023.
Of 14
global regions, only south-east Asia saw a decrease in synchronous fire
weather, probably because it is getting more humid there, Yin said.

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