Climate change made weather conditions that powered Quebec fires twice as likely, scientists say
Results of scientific study on record-breaking fire season are 'shocking' — even to one of its authors
The record-setting wildfires that ripped through Quebec this summer were made more likely and more intense by human-caused climate change, according to a new analysis by an international team of scientists.
The World Weather Attribution initiative, a U.K.-based group that estimates the contribution of climate change to individual weather events, found that our changing climate made the weather conditions that drove the wildfires two times more likely.
The analysis focused on Quebec, which experienced an exceptionally high number of wildfires in May and June after a dry, hot spring. The province has recorded a total of 5.2 million hectares burned this year.
Yan Boulanger, a research scientist at Natural Resources Canada and one of the study's authors, called the findings "shocking."
"We know that those extreme fire-prone weather conditions are occurring more frequently," he said in an interview.
"Now we are able to put the number or an estimate on to what extent those conditions that we have seen this year are caused actually by climate change — and the numbers are very high."
Powerful fires likely to occur more often
Quebec was chosen for the analysis because of its particularly difficult season, the researchers said, though other Canadian provinces and territories have also had exceptional wildfire seasons. The researchers said they may also examine a broader region of the country in future.
Across Canada, an estimated 15.3 million hectares have burned already this season — more than twice the previous record of 7.6 million reported in 1989.
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The Quebec analysis has not yet been subject to scientific peer review, but it is based on peer-reviewed modelling. In the past, the research group has subjected its analyses to review and has not had to change its findings.
In this case, Boulanger and the other researchers used models to simulate how weather systems might behave without climate change and compared those with what is happening today.
The analysis used the Fire Weather Index (FWI), a metric that combines temperature, wind speed, humidity and precipitation in order to estimate the risk of wildfire.
The researchers analyzed the seven-day maximum of the FWI over the study region — which spans much of central and northern Quebec — to assess the peak intensity of the fire weather. They concluded that the fire weather in Quebec was twice as likely to occur and around 20 per cent more intense because of climate change.
The researchers also noted that while the fire-prone weather conditions were unprecedented, they are expected to become less and less unusual.
In today's climate, similar weather conditions can be expected to occur once every 25 years, the researchers said, meaning that they have about a four per cent chance of occurring each year.
But if the planet continues to warm, the risk of even greater wildfires will further increase, Boulanger said.
"The odds of having more of these kinds of events are increasing into the future."
Rise of attribution science
The analysis was conducted by 16 researchers within the World Weather Attribution group, from universities and meteorological agencies in Canada, the Netherlands, the U.K. and the U.S.
Founded in 2015, the group studies extreme weather events, such as droughts, floods and heat waves to assess the role played by climate change. It is part of the growing field of attribution science, which attempts to make connections between individual weather events and climate change.
Such analyses can serve an important role in shaping public policy, said Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at the Imperial College of London who was also involved in the Quebec analysis.
"There are often important lessons that can be used for the next time such an event occurs," she said.
That's a sentiment echoed by Mohammad Reza Alizadeh, a climate data scientist at McGill University in Montreal who was not involved with the research.
We're entering a "new chapter" in our understanding of climate events, he said, also pointing to Australia's 2019-20 bushfire season, California's unprecedented 2021 wildfire season and the persistent heat waves that have swept through Europe for the past two summers.
"All these kinds of events, they are giving us a wake-up call," said Alizadeh. "To say we really need to … maybe reconsider our definition of extreme events.
"We really need to adapt and update our adaptation plans, our definitions … and also even our studies and science."
Indigenous, remote communities bear impact
The wildfire impacts were disproportionately experienced by remote communities, especially Indigenous people, the researchers said.
"In early July, it was also calculated more than 75 per cent of people in Canada under evacuation orders belonged to Indigenous communities," the study authors note.
Rhonda Oblin Cooper, deputy chief of the Cree community of Waswanipi in northern Quebec, described June as "really, really chaotic." Large parts of the community were evacuated twice — at the beginning and end of the month.
"It was a very abnormal type of year," she said. "That's what everybody's commenting.… The conditions were not usual — the number of fires, the issues that we were dealing with, one after the other."
The sheer number of fires in the region impacted electricity and water resources at times, she said, and hindered access to essentials such as groceries and gas. Then, there was the heavy smoke.
"Add all those other factors, and you start realizing, 'OK, we're surrounded here,'" she recalled.
While the situation in the region has improved in recent weeks, Oblin Cooper says about 30 per cent of the community's traplines were lost to the fires, jeopardizing the ability to pass on hunting knowledge to future generations.
"So, we're going to have to do some introspection to figure out, how do we share the resources that are left, how do we share the land that's left," she said.
"These are things that I think we're just starting to grasp, just how much we're getting impacted by these forest fires."
With files from Aatefeh Padidar and Alison Northcott