-
This is a crisis.
-
If we were on a plane,
I think the pilot's control panel
-
would have several alarms going off.
-
Siberia, Usa, Turkey, Greece,
and Italy and Portugal in recent years.
-
Huge areas just going up in flames.
Everything being reduced to ash.
-
Scene after scene of hillsides ablaze.
-
Wildfires are in one sense
very very simple.
-
It just needs a spark
in dry conditions to set them off.
-
But in another sense
they're also very complex,
-
because the extent to which they spread
-
depends very much on
conditions in the ecosystem.
-
How much moisture is there
in the ground, in the air?
-
How long has it been
since there was last rainfall?
-
What kind of trees there are.
-
How dense is the biodiversity?
-
Fires tend to burn faster
when they're in a plantation
-
and there's just one type of tree.
-
There isn't much undergrowth from moss
-
and things like that,
that could absorb water.
-
You get what scientists are always
describing as tinderbox-like conditions,
-
where it doesn't
take much to start the fire.
-
and then once the fire is started,
it spreads very, very quickly.
-
They can be set off by lighting strikes,
by barbeques, dropped cigarettes,
-
or by farmers who use fires
to clear land and then lose control.
-
Wildfires have always existed.
-
They are natural and they do
play a process in forest management.
-
But when you've just got plantations
or when everything has been dried out,
-
wildfires can spread
over enormous distances
-
very very quickly.
-
The meshing together
-
of lots of different plants and mosses,
-
and animals, and streams,
-
and all of these things
that create an eco system
-
are actually very strong and resilient
when they're together.
-
When you strip that all away,
-
if you just take out
all of the biodiversity,
-
you're making the forest more vulnerable.
-
Once a fire has got
ahold of a monoculture,
-
if it's burnt a stretch of five trees,
-
the chances are, it can burn 5000 trees
-
because they're all planted in lines
at roughly the same distance.
-
Counter-intuitively,
there are actually fewer wildfires
-
than there were in the past
-
But what is happening is that there is
a different type of wildfire now.
-
We're seeing fewer fires,
but more intense ones.
-
Because fires are spreading to areas
where there's more fuel, more trees.
-
And when trees burn,
-
obviously much more
carbon is being released.
-
And they burn
much longer and much harder.
-
We've already had more than
one degree Celcius warming
-
since the industrial era
as the result of human emissions,
-
like exhaust fumes,
-
industrial releases from chimneys,
-
and deforestation.
-
And all these gases are being released
-
into the atmosphere
that's kind of cloaking the planet.
-
And then everything below it heats up.
-
We're seeing the water cycle change.
-
We're seeing the lands
dry out more frequently
-
and protracted periods
of high temperatures.
-
A kind of reinforcing
climate feedback mechanism
-
because as more fires burn more fuel,
-
they release more carbon
into the atmosphere
-
which means more global heating,
-
which means more fires.
-
We're going to have to
think more about natural defenses
-
because plantations and monocultures
are much more vulnerable to fire.
-
So we need to think
how we plant things
-
so that nature has a chance
of defending itself.
-
At the same time,
the best and biggest thing we can do
-
is reduce carbon emissions
as quickly as possible.
-
At the very least,
that buys more time
-
to look for solutions
and spreads out the impact.
-
It's very clear that fires are
getting worse because of climate change.
-
We're in an emergency.
-
And if we don't treat it as an emergency,
-
it's going to get worse.
-
We need to do
much more about it
-
much more quickly.