by: Dr. Reese Halter, AlterNet
The 850 fires burning in California alone should be a wake up call that we're unprepared for rapid climate change.
The hundreds of fires hitting California right now are a
wake-up call to both government and California residents: we're
unprepared for a rapid climate change crackling at our doorstep.
The facts are unequivocal, and point to a troubling future
ahead. Over 850 fires, scorching some 200,000 acres, have set a new
2008 record for early-season wildfires in California. And from March to
May precipitation has been the lowest since the inception of record
keeping in 1894. In California as well as throughout the West, mountain
snowmelts are occurring earlier, and winter storms are arriving later,
extending the fire season by at least several weeks.
On June 5, 2008 Governor Schwarzenegger declared a
state-wide drought. Droughts fuel wildfires. Across western North
America global warming has caused prolonged droughts - some areas are
now entering their 13th year - and warmer temperatures. These are the
same kind of conditions that led to the mega fires of 2003 and 2007.
What's more, in California and throughout the West,
millions of acres of drought have created tinder-dry kindling through
weakened forests that have been ravaged by billions of indigenous bark
beetles and disease. Currently, there is no serious policy being
implemented to clear out these dead trees, fireproof communities and
inform residents of a plan of action.
Why is this happening?
A mismanaged forest policy has suppressed the natural
occurrence of fire, and as a result, many of our California forests are
overstocked, and now tinder dry. When lightning strikes occur in
combination with drought, mega-fires can't be far away.