logo
Climate change made fire conditions twice as likely in South Korea blazes: Study

Climate change made fire conditions twice as likely in South Korea blazes: Study

Time of India01-05-2025

Climate change made fire conditions twice as likely in South Korea blazes: Study (Photo: AP)
Human-induced climate change
made the ultra-dry and warm conditions that fanned South Korea's deadliest wildfires in history this March twice as likely and more intense, researchers said Thursday.
Vast swaths of the country's southeast were burned in a series of blazes in March, which killed 31 people and destroyed historic sites, including a some thousand-year-old temple site.
The affected area had been experiencing below-average rainfall for months and was then hit by strong winds, local officials said, following South Korea's hottest year on record in 2024.
The hot, dry and windy conditions that fed the flames were "twice as likely and about 15 percent more intense" due to human-caused climate change, said World Weather Attribution, a scientific network that studies the influence of global warming on extreme weather.
"South Korea's deadliest wildfires were made much more likely by climate change," said Clair Barnes, a WWA researcher from the centre for
environmental policy
, Imperial College London.
Officials said at the time that the conditions made it very hard for conventional firefighting methods to control the blazes, which leapt from pine tree to pine tree across dried-out hillsides.
"These unprecedented conditions exposed the limits of even well-developed suppression systems," WWA said in a report of its findings.
"With fires increasingly likely to exceed control capacity, the emphasis must shift toward proactive risk reduction," it added.
More than 62 percent of South Korea is covered in forest, the report said, with dense tree cover especially prominent along the eastern coast and in mountainous regions, landscapes that significantly influence how wildfires spread.
Around 11 percent of South Korea's forested areas border human settlements, the study said.
"These areas are particularly susceptible to ignition and have accounted for nearly 30 percent of wildfires recorded between 2016 and 2022."
The researchers' findings were most conclusive regarding the increased likelihood of fire weather, which is measured by the Hot-Dry-Windy Index (HDWI) and higher maximum temperatures.
But they found no attributable link between
climate change
and rainfall levels during the period surrounding the fires.
Fires rage
South Korea has few energy resources of its own and relies on imported coal, a cheap but dirty fuel for around a third of the electricity powering it, according to figures from the International energy agency.
The inferno in March also laid bare the country's demographic crisis and regional disparities, as rural areas are both underpopulated and disproportionately home to senior citizens.
Many of the dead were seniors, and experts have warned that it will be hard for people to rebuild their lives in the burn zone.
In the weeks and months since, South Korea has recorded a string of wildfires.
In April, helicopters were deployed to contain a wildfire within the DMZ, the buffer zone separating the South from nuclear-armed North Korea.
This week, more than 2,000 people were forced to evacuate after wildfires occurred in parts of the southeastern city of Daegu, after a blaze broke out on Mount Hamji in the region.
WWA is a pioneer in attribution science, which uses peer-reviewed methods to quickly assess the possible influence of climate change on extreme weather events.
This allows a comparison of observations from today's climate, with some 1.3 degrees Celsius of warming, against computer simulations that consider the climate before humanity started burning fossil fuels in the 1800s.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Smoke from Canadian wildfires chokes US Midwest, air turns ‘very unhealthy'
Smoke from Canadian wildfires chokes US Midwest, air turns ‘very unhealthy'

First Post

time2 days ago

  • First Post

Smoke from Canadian wildfires chokes US Midwest, air turns ‘very unhealthy'

Smoke from Canadian wildfires continued to blanket parts of the US Midwest on Tuesday, with air quality in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan reaching 'very unhealthy' levels. read more Wildfire smoke hangs in the air above Highway 97 north of Buckinghorse River, British Columbia, on Friday, May 30, 2025. AP Photo Smoke from wildfires in Canada caused another day of poor air quality across parts of the US Midwest on Tuesday, especially in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan, where conditions were rated 'very unhealthy.' Over 27,000 people in Canada have been forced to evacuate, and the smoke has even reached Europe. In the Minneapolis-St Paul area, the smell of smoke lingered despite some rain. The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency issued a warning for nearly the whole state, saying air quality would slowly improve by Wednesday. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The smoke also affected parts of Iowa, where officials advised people—especially those with heart or lung conditions—to avoid intense outdoor activity. The smoky air reached as far as Georgia in the southeast, the Dakotas in the west, and Michigan in the east. The US Air Quality Index (AQI) showed unhealthy to very unhealthy levels in several areas, especially in eastern Minnesota and the Twin Cities. Some places briefly reached the 'hazardous' maroon category, but conditions started to improve by midday. Hospitals in Minneapolis reported a slight rise in patients with breathing problems linked to the smoke. Dr. Rachel Strykowski, a lung specialist, said wildfire smoke makes conditions like asthma and COPD worse. She advised people to stay indoors and wear N95 masks if going outside, as regular cloth masks don't provide enough protection. This is a developing story.

Nigeria flooding death toll jumps past 200
Nigeria flooding death toll jumps past 200

Time of India

time2 days ago

  • Time of India

Nigeria flooding death toll jumps past 200

Nigeria flooding death toll jumps past 200 (AP) ABUJA: Flash flooding in north-central Nigeria last week killed more than 200 people, the Niger state humanitarian commissioner said Tuesday, while hundreds more remain missing and are feared dead. The town of Mokwa was hit with the worst flash flood in living memory Thursday from overnight rains, with more than 250 homes destroyed and swathes of the town wiped out in a single morning. The announcement comes after several days of the official toll standing at around 150, even as residents were sometimes missing more than a dozen members in a single family. "We have more than 200... corpses," Ahmad Suleiman told Nigerian broadcaster Channels Television, adding: "Nobody can tell you the number of casualties in Niger state right now because up till now, we are still looking for some corpses." "We're still looking for more," he added. But, he said, "sincerely speaking, we cannot ascertain." Given the number of people still missing nearly a week later, the toll from a single morning of flooding in Mokwa could be worse than all of 2024 combined, which saw 321 deaths from flooding across the country. The Niger State Emergency Management Agency said Tuesday that the death toll was 159. Climate change, human factors Climate change has made weather swings in Nigeria more extreme, but residents in Mokwa said human factors were also at play. Water had been building up for days behind an abandoned railway track that runs along the edge of the town, residents told AFP. It would usually pass through a couple of culverts in the mounds and run into a narrow channel. But debris had blocked the culverts, forcing water to build up behind the clay walls that eventually gave way. Floods in Nigeria are often exacerbated by inadequate drainage, the construction of homes on waterways and the dumping of waste in drains and water channels. Federal water management minister Joseph Utsev said that the flooding was "caused by heavy rainfall due to extreme weather conditions occasioned by climate change", though he also cautioned against "unregulated structures" and called on local governments to maintain their drainage channels. Volunteers and disaster response teams have recovered bodies nearly 10 kilometres (six miles) away after they were swept into the Niger River. Warnings issued Days before the disaster struck Mokwa, the Nigerian Meteorological Agency had warned of possible flash floods in 15 of Nigeria's 36 states, including Niger state, between Wednesday and Friday. When AFP reporters visited the town earlier this week, a powerful stench filled the air, which residents said came from decaying corpses trapped under the rubble. The government said it has delivered aid, but locals have criticised what they say is a lacklustre response, with multiple families telling AFP they hadn't received anything. The National Emergency Management Agency issued another statement Tuesday saying it was "working tirelessly to provide immediate assistance to affected residents".

Canada wildfire: Quebec sends firefighters and water bombers to aid Western Canada as wildfires force mass evacuations
Canada wildfire: Quebec sends firefighters and water bombers to aid Western Canada as wildfires force mass evacuations

Economic Times

time4 days ago

  • Economic Times

Canada wildfire: Quebec sends firefighters and water bombers to aid Western Canada as wildfires force mass evacuations

AP A Quebec CL-415 water bomber, previously deployed in Labrador, now joins the fight against raging wildfires across Western Canada, as thousands flee their homes in Manitoba and Saskatchewan Quebec has stepped in to help neighbouring provinces battling severe wildfires, as flames driven by a late-May heat wave continue to spread across Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan. Premier François Legault announced on Sunday(June 1) that a specialized management team will head to Alberta on Tuesday, and three sections of 20 firefighters each will join Manitoba's efforts to contain the blazes. Two CL-415 water bombers from Quebec are already operating in Saskatchewan, while two others have been deployed to Ontario to assist where needed. Also read: No rain in sight as Manitoba grapples with raging wildfires; 17,000 evacuated Across the Prairies, extraordinarily hot, dry conditions have fueled more than 80 active fires. Manitoba and Saskatchewan declared states of emergency this week, and Alberta is juggling 51 fires that threaten both remote forests and oil operations. In Manitoba alone, Premier Wab Kinew confirmed roughly 17,000 people have been forced to leave their homes as crews battle 23 active blazes in the north. In Saskatchewan, at least 4,000 residents were evacuated by May 28 as fires closed roads and crept toward small Winnipeg, evacuees streamed into repurposed shelters and friends' homes, uncertain where they would spend the night. 'It's hard on everybody,' said Richard Korte, a school maintenance technician who fled Flin Flon with his wife and disabled son. From a temporary emergency shelter inside a hockey arena, evacuee Chris Schultz sat in his pickup with his dog, Stella, watching for friends and relatives arriving by bus. 'I might break out crying,' he admitted, 'but Stella makes life a bit easier for some of us.' Also read: Out of control wildfire explodes across BC-Alberta border First Nations communities in northern Manitoba have felt an acute sense of urgency as fires surround isolated reserves. Some elders and people with mobility challenges have been airlifted to safety, though heavy smoke grounded at least one charter flight. Evacuees described frustration at long waits for bus rides and limited hotel space, prompting Indigenous leaders to call for priority accommodations in southern communities. While Quebec has no active fires within its intensive protection zone and has lifted a ban on open fires in the north, Legault emphasized solidarity on social media. 'Saskatchewan, Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario are going through difficult times with forest fires. Premiers Scott Moe, Danielle Smith, Wab Kinew and Doug Ford can count on our help and that of SOPFEU. We are with you wholeheartedly,' he wrote, noting that Quebec's Public Safety Minister François Bonnardel is 'closely monitoring the situation here' and that recent rainfall prompted the decision to send aid . Quebec's rapid response echoes mutual assistance calls from western premiers. 'We need to stay calm,' Kinew told reporters. 'We cannot thank other jurisdictions enough,' he said, referring to firefighting crews arriving from Quebec, Ontario, and the United States, which have dispatched air tankers and 150 firefighters to Manitoba.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store