Kirchmeier-Young Megan C, Zwiers Francis W, Gillett Nathan P, Cannon Alex J
1Pacific Climate Impacts Consortium, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC V8W 2Y2 Canada.
2Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis, Environment and Climate Change Canada, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC V8W 2Y2 Canada.
Clim Change. 2017;144(2):365-379. doi: 10.1007/s10584-017-2030-0. Epub 2017 Jul 15.
Canada is expected to see an increase in fire risk under future climate projections. Large fires, such as that near Fort McMurray, Alberta in 2016, can be devastating to the communities affected. Understanding the role of human emissions in the occurrence of such extreme fire events can lend insight into how these events might change in the future. An event attribution framework is used to quantify the influence of anthropogenic forcings on extreme fire risk in the current climate of a western Canada region. Fourteen metrics from the Canadian Forest Fire Danger Rating System are used to define the extreme fire seasons. For the majority of these metrics and during the current decade, the combined effect of anthropogenic and natural forcing is estimated to have made extreme fire risk events in the region 1.5 to 6 times as likely compared to a climate that would have been with natural forcings alone.
根据未来气候预测,加拿大预计火灾风险将会增加。大型火灾,比如2016年阿尔伯塔省麦克默里堡附近发生的火灾,会对受影响的社区造成毁灭性打击。了解人类排放物在这类极端火灾事件发生过程中所起的作用,有助于深入洞察这些事件在未来可能会如何变化。一个事件归因框架被用于量化人为强迫因素对加拿大西部地区当前气候下极端火灾风险的影响。来自加拿大森林火灾危险评级系统的14个指标被用于定义极端火灾季节。对于这些指标中的大多数以及在当前十年期间,据估计,与仅受自然强迫因素影响的气候相比,人为强迫因素和自然强迫因素的综合作用使得该地区发生极端火灾风险事件的可能性增加了1.5至6倍。