This trend — even more pronounced in California’s higher-elevation mountains and northern forests, where fire season has expanded by an average of two days every year in the same period — likely will continue as climate change continues to warm the planet, according to the study, which was made possible with support from the National Science Foundation and Department of Energy.
In parts of California over the last 30 years, warming has pushed the wildfire season anywhere from a week to almost seven weeks earlier.
“These findings underscore the very real impact climate change has on people’s lives and livelihoods,” said Alex Hall, a co-author of the report and director of both the Sustainable LA Grand Challenge and Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, or IoES. Read More: University of California Los Angeles
Source: ENN
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