News | Environment
17 Oct 2025 12:50
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Environment

    The climate crisis is fuelling extreme fires across the planet

    It’s clear – climate change is supercharging the world’s wildfires in unpredictable and devastating ways.

    Hamish Clarke, Senior Research Fellow, The University of Melbourne
    The Conversation


    We’ve all seen the alarming images. Smoke belching from the thick forests of the Amazon. Spanish firefighters battling flames across farmland. Blackened celebrity homes in Los Angeles and smoked out regional towns in Australia.

    If you felt like wildfires and their impacts were more extreme in the past year – you’re right. Our new report, a collaboration between scientists across continents, shows climate change supercharged the world’s wildfires in unpredictable and devastating ways.

    Human-caused climate change increased the area burned by wildfires, called bushfires in Australia, by a magnitude of 30 in some regions in the world. Our snapshot offers important new evidence of how climate change is increasing the frequency and severity of extreme fires. And it serves as a stark reminder of the urgent need to rapidly cut greenhouse gas emissions.

    The evidence is clear – climate change is making fires worse.

    An aerial view of the Palisades fire zone in Los Angeles, showing burned building foundations.
    A view of the Palisades fire zone in Los Angeles, where climate change fuelled the fires in January. Allen J. Schaben/Getty

    Clear pattern

    Our study used satellite observations and advanced modelling to find and investigate the causes of wildfires in the past year. The research team considered the role that climate and land use change played, and found a clear interrelationship between climate and extreme events.

    Regional experts provided local input to capture events and impacts that satellites did not pick up. For Oceania, this role was played by Dr Sarah Harris from the Country Fire Authority and myself.

    In the past year, a land area larger than India – about 3.7 million square kilometres – was burnt globally. More than 100 million people were affected by these fires, and US$215 billion worth of homes and infrastructure were at risk.

    Not only does the heating climate mean more dangerous, fire-prone conditions, but it also affects how vegetation grows and dries out, creating fuel for fires to spread.

    In Australia, bushfires did not reach the overall extent or impact of previous seasons, such as the Black Summer bushfires of 2019–20. Nonetheless, more than 1,000 large fires burned around 470,000 hectares in Western Australia, and more than 5 million hectares burned in central Australia. In Victoria, the Grampians National Park saw two-thirds of its area burned.

    In the United States, our analysis showed the deadly Los Angeles wildfires in January were twice as likely and burned an area 25 times bigger than they would have in a world without global warming. Unusually wet weather in Los Angeles in the preceding 30 months contributed to strong vegetation growth and laid the foundations for wildfires during an unusually hot and dry January.

    In South America, fires in the Pantanal-Chiquitano region, which straddles the border between Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay, were 35 times larger due to climate change. Record-breaking fires ravaged parts of the Amazon and Congo, releasing billions of tonnes of carbon dioxide.

    A man and woman hold cardboard signs with words and images protesting the burning of the Amazon forest.
    Protestors march for climate justice and against wild fires affecting the entire country in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Faga Almeida/Getty

    Not too late

    It’s clear that if global greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise, more severe heatwaves and droughts will make landscape fires more frequent and intense worldwide.

    But it’s not too late to act. We need stronger and faster climate action to cut fossil fuel emissions, protect nature and reduce land clearing.

    And we can get better at responding to the risk of fires, from nuanced forest management to preparing households and short and long-term disaster recovery.

    There are regional differences in fires, and so the response also need to be local. We should prioritise local and regional knowledge, and First Nations knowledge, in responding to bushfire.

    Action at COP30

    Fires emitted more than 8 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide in 2024–25, about 10% above the average since 2003. Emissions were more than triple the global average in South American dry forests and wetlands, and double the average in Canadian boreal forests. That’s a deeply concerning amount of greenhouse pollution. The excess emissions alone exceeded the national fossil fuel CO2 emissions of more than 200 individual countries in 2024.

    Next month, world leaders, scientists, non-governmental organisations and civil society will head to Belem in Brazil for the United Nations annual climate summit (COP30) to talk about how to tackle climate change.

    The single most powerful contribution developed nations can make to avoid the worst impacts of extreme wildfires is to commit to rapidly cutting greenhouse gas emissions this decade.

    The Conversation

    Hamish Clarke receives funding from the Westpac Scholars Trust (HC) and the Australian Research Council via an Industry Fellowship IM240100046. He is a member of the International Association of Wildland Fire, the Australian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society and the Australian Science Communicators, and a member of the Oceania Regional Committee of the IUCN Commission on Ecosystem Management.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other Environment News
     16 Oct: A number of highways in northern Taranaki will stay closed until tomorrow - while crews assess damage from Tuesday's heavy rain
     16 Oct: Cautious optimism New Zealand could once again be home to the now-extinct Moa, by the year 2035
     16 Oct: Fossil hand bones hint that ancient human relative Paranthropus made tools 1.5 million years ago
     15 Oct: Mooove over dairy and beef cows, for a new hybrid breed on the block
     15 Oct: Waikato's State Highway 30 - from Te Kuiti to Benneydale - is expected to open at 7pm - after being closed since yesterday's downpours
     15 Oct: Major roads are staying shut in northern Taranaki and Waikato today, after yesterday's downpours
     14 Oct: A ‘lack of ambition’ over livestock emissions targets now threatens NZ’s reputation and trade
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    A major moment for Super Rugby Pacific's resurrected Super Round More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    A first of it's kind commercial seaweed bio-refinery in opening in Waikato's Paeroa today More...



     Today's News

    Entertainment:
    Britney Spears says people should "find a new family" if they haven't "honoured you" 12:47

    Cricket:
    Former New Zealand cricket captain Tim Southee's playing down the notion of sharing "intellectual property" with his new employers 12:47

    Law and Order:
    A spotlight will be turned on children's motocross after a coroner ruled four deaths will be examined in a joint inquest 12:27

    Entertainment:
    Cardi B feels "tired" of her public feuds 12:17

    International:
    Ace Frehley, founding member of rock group KISS, dies at 74 12:17

    Netball:
    The Silver Ferns have trimmed their squad for tonight's opening Constellation Cup netball test against Australia in Melbourne 12:17

    International:
    Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin to discuss Ukraine war at Budapest summit 12:17

    Law and Order:
    A man has been charged with manslaughter following the disappearance of Jason Butler, four years ago 11:57

    Entertainment:
    Busta Rhymes has countersued his former assistant for allegedly "fabricating" an assault lawsuit 11:47

    Entertainment:
    Beyonce has led tributes to D'Angelo following his death aged 51 11:17


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd