“Firefighters, legislators, and residents on the East Coast should watch carefully the way their California counterparts are dealing with wildfires tearing through the state. The combined forces that brought about the blaze are growing more and more present in the Northeast”, said Stephen Flynn, the founding director of Northeastern University’s Global Resilience Institute.“The sooner we get our act together here, the better,” Flynn said, speaking from the university’s Boston campus. “There’s a lot we can learn here on the East Coast.”
Wildfires in northern and southern California have devastated broad swaths of the state, killing more than 60 people and destroying thousands of homes. While it’s still unclear what sparked the fires, there are several factors that accelerated them, said Flynn, who published a report last year on the changing landscape of wildfires for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.First, as development spreads, housing and other buildings are encroaching upon what had previously been wilderness. This increases the likelihood that a wildfire will become fatal or otherwise destructive to homes, Flynn said.Second, a changing climate is increasing the likelihood of extreme weather, Flynn said. This includes extended periods of drought and heat—conditions that prime forestland for fast-moving fires.
“Those combined forces are playing out in a very dramatic way in California,” he opined.And they’re conditions that are growing more and more present along the East Coast and in New England specifically, Flynn said.The failure of family farms and subsequent reforestation of New England in general and Connecticut in particular means there are trees next to buildings that weren’t there before, Flynn said. With those trees serving as fuel, this means that those developed areas are more vulnerable to wildfires. Flynn elucidated, “When you combine the risk of extreme heat and drought brought on by climate change with the built environment moving into the wilderness, they’re twin factors that put the risk of wildfires at a far greater level,”.
Harminder Singh
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