'Years of Living Dangerously' shouts climate fire! But, data says their shouting is simply noise

Taking liberty or artistic license? Debunking the claims made in the film that almost nobody watches, and now shouldn’t even take seriously

YEARS_OF_LIVING-DANGEROUSLYGuest essay by Jim Steele, Director emeritus Sierra Nevada Field Campus, San Francisco State University and author of “Landscapes and Cycles: An Environmentalist’s Journey to Climate Skepticism.”

Yelling “fire” in a crowded room is the iconic example used to distinguish free speech from license. Falsely claiming there was a fire in a crowded room would be punishable license because it could cause a panicked stampede resulting in injury. Episode 2 of Years of Living Dangerously treads dangerously close to license, as the producers present a completely one-sided biased view of forest fires purposely trying to incite climate panic. Those of us who have studied forest ecology for the past few decades have understood that bigger more destructive fires have been the result of fire suppression and a growing population. As the USA added 100 million people since 1970, more and more people moved into more forested areas and changes in fire frequency are skewed by the number of fires ignited by humans.

For example the Arbor Day Foundation reports that more than 83% of forest fires in 2006 were started by human activities, accounting for the burning of nearly 4.4 million acres. In 2004, wildfires in Alaska burned more than 5 million acres, the worst year for Alaskan fires. However 426 fires were started by humans and only 275 were natural fires ignited by lightning. In 2003 California’s “Fire Siege” the first of several fires was set during military artillery practice. The biggest fire, the Cedar Fire, happened when a signal fire got out of control.

While using movie stars to bludgeon us with the idea that all bad things must be due CO2 climate change, “Years of Living Dangerously” committed huge sins of omission.

There is a wealth of scientific research regards the effects of fire suppression and natural cycles. Instead Arnold Schwarzenegger yuks it up with firefighters on the frontline.

Arnold_on_years

The episode then exploits human tragedy by highlighting the recent death of a “hot shot” crew. And Arnold (scientist?) then marries the tragedies by telling us CO2 climate change is making fires bigger, more frequent, and more dangerous.

But Arnold never tells us forests that naturally experienced fires every 5 to 40 years, had built up dangerously high fuel loads. During the 20th century era of fire suppression the US Forest Service’s “10 AM rule” dominated, and every attempt was made to extinguish all small fires by 10 AM the next day. Normally those small fires would burn longer and spread further and create a mosaic of forest patches. The remaining forest patches were then buffered from any new fires that started in a neighboring patch and large catastrophic fires are very rare in mosaic habitats. A patchy forest also prevents widespread beetle infestations.1 Until the media’s recent attempts to promote climate fear, forest ecologists had always complained fire suppression was promoting larger beetle infestations. A list of research on the effects of logging, fire suppression and natural cycles on beetle infestations can be found here. Yet “Years of Living Dangerously” simply blames climate change.

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In 1996 one of the fire experts interviewed in “Years of Living Dangerously”, Thomas Swetnam wrote:

“The paradox of fire management in conifer forests is that, if in the short term we are effective at reducing fire occurrence below a certain level, then sooner or later catastrophically destructive wildfires will occur. Even the most efficient and technologically advanced fire fighting efforts can only forestall this inevitable result. It is clear from many years of study and published works that the thinning action of pre-settlement surface fires maintained open stand conditions and thereby prevented the historically anomalous occurrence of catastrophic crown fires that we are experiencing in today’s Southwestern forests2

[emphasis added]

However there are other forests at higher elevation that naturally burn every 100 to 300 years. Over that time fuel loads naturally build to dangerous levels. When those forests burn it is usually catastrophic. So Swetnam also co-authored a paper with Westerling, suggesting the increase in fires since 1970s is likely do climate change and that paper became the “scientific basis” for this episode of “Years of Living Dangerously”. They cited warm temperatures and dry weather associated with those large catastrophic fires but they confused weather for climate and their paper only diagnosed 3 decades of trends and only the largest fires (see graph below). However the authors did admit, “Whether the changes observed in western hydroclimate and wildfire are the result of greenhouse gas–induced global warming or only an unusual natural fluctuation is beyond the scope of this work.” [emphasis added] Nonetheless instead of providing a greater historical framework to critique natural cycles that last 60 to 200 years, they promoted untested speculation and simply reported that all the models predict more fires due to CO2 warming in the future.

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Figure from Westerling 2006

But all catastrophic fires for the past several centuries have been associated with warm dry conditions. Months of dry weather accelerated the biggest fires in written history. Swetnam himself had published papers showing southwest forest fires were far larger and far more frequent between 1700 and 1900 as seen in his published graph (Fig.5 below) Other authors echoed the same findings. Estimated from early journalists’ accounts of fire throughout the Rocky Mountain region, modern fires burn less than one-fourth of the land that had burned historically. Fire ecologists debating how great an area needs to be burned to restore the natural fire regimes reported a “comprehensive assessment of burning in the contiguous United States and estimated that approximately 3 to 6 times more area must be burned to restore historical fire regimes.”1 The Westerling paper shows a peak in 1988, driven largely by the Yellowstone fires that burnt about 800,000 acres. In comparison The Great Fire of 1910 was a wildfire that burned about three million acres (approximately the size of Connecticut) in northeast Washington, northern Idaho, and western Montana. From a historical point of view, the Yellowstone fire was modest.

The Peshtigo Fire of 1871 (in and around Peshtigo, Wisconsin) caused an estimated 1,500 deaths possibly as many as 2,500. It consumed about 1.5 million acres, an area approximately twice the size of Rhode Island. The combination of wind, topography and fire that created the firestorm that is now known as the Peshtigo Paradigm. Those elements that created the fire were studied and recreated by the American and British military during World War II for the fire bombings of German and Japanese cities. Nonetheless the Peshtigo fire happened the same time as the Great Chicago Fire, so it did not get a lot of media attention. However the combination of those catastrophic fires prompted a fearful public to speculate that comets, meteorites or aliens were behind those firestorms, and one must wonder if blaming CO2 for recent fires is driven by the same lack of scientific understanding.

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The USA embarked on an era of fire suppression as early as 1886 when the U.S. Army began to patrol the newly created National Parks. But fire suppression to preserve natural resources had unintended consequences. The consensus among fire experts is “Fires generally become less frequent and more severe with active suppression on the landscape” “Modern wildfires on late seral landscapes tend to be larger, more intense, and more severe because of high biomass loadings, multilayer stand structures, and the high connectivity of the biomass at the stand and landscape level.” “The end result of fire exclusion in fire-prone forests is increasingly synchronous landscapes dominated by large, catastrophic disturbance regimes.”1

The Westerling paper argued that the greatest absolute increase in large wildfires occurred in Northern Rockies forests where fire exclusion has had little impact on natural fire regimes because those forest had only burned every 100 to 300 years and the era of fire suppression was too short to play a significant role. So they suggested that earlier springs due to climate change had caused the increase in catastrophic fires in that region. However a study by the US Forest service concluded fire suppression has played a major role in the Rocky Mountains.1 A picture near the Yellowstone River from 1871 shows a landscape dominated by grasslands and a mosaic of forest patches (Figure 1C below). After a century of suppression, a photograph of the same area from 1981 (Figure 1D below) shows a vast expanse of interconnected forest with a high fuel load now dominating landscape and primed for a huge fire. Until that landscape recovered from the 1800s fires, large catastrophic fires would impossible.

Large fires have always been a natural occurrence in these regions. What is unprecedented in recent decades are tremendous swathes of dense forest. (Also notice contrary to global warming theory, trees confined to the higher elevations had migrated to lower elevations.) Furthermore the sudden uptick in recent forest fires beginning in the 1970s correlates with a change in forest management. Land managers now recognized the importance of natural fires and the mosaic the prevented devastating fires and promoted biodiversity. The “10 AM” rule was dropped and small fires were allowed to burn. The 3 decades of fire suppression simply delayed the inevitable as forests recovered. Catastrophic fires in Yellowstone were the result of small fires that were now allowed to burn.6

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The American West also experiences decades of drought driven by natural ocean cycles. Most extreme climate events occur when a La Niña and a cold Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) phase coincide, or when an EL Niño and a warm PDO phase coincide. When a La Niña and a cold PDO coincide, the southwestern United States experiences its severest droughts and heightened fire danger. For example, each phase of the PDO persists for about 20-30 years, but cycles of El Niño and La Niña alternate every two to seven years. Thus the coincidence of both a La Niña and the cool phase of the PDO has only occurred about 29% of the time. However since the 1700s that 29% coincided with 70% of all major fires in Rocky Mountain National Park. Colorado’s 2012 wildfire season was no exception.5 Snow fall and the timing of Spring’s arrival is als0 largely driven the Pacific Decadal Oscillation.6 Informing the public about those natural cycles would help them prepare better for the weather it brings, but this episode prefer fear mongering.

“Years of Living Dangerously” justifies yelling fire and promoting climate fear based on Westerling paper that reports all the models show rising CO2 will cause warmer and drier weather in some places (but wetter elsewhere). However those models have failed horribly in replicating natural ocean cycles. Several researchers have shown that the warmth and drought predicted by CO2 driven models may have mistakenly modeled the climate effects of ocean cycles but blamed the results on CO2. One study from climate experts at Los Alamos National Laboratories explored the climate impacts of the PDO and Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation on the American Southwest.

They concluded,

“The late twentieth century warming was about equally influenced by increasing concentration of atmospheric greenhouse gases (GHGs) and a positive phase of the AMO [Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation].” “A strong warming and severe drought predicted on the basis of the ensemble mean of the CMIP climate models simulations is supported by our regression analysis only in a very unlikely case of the continually increasing AMO at a rate similar to its 1970–2010 increase7

The 17 year hiatus global warming is likewis being attributed to those same ocean cycles, and ardent advocates of CO2 climate change like Kevin Trenberth now admit, “The IPCC has not paid enough attention to natural variability, on several time scales, especially El Niños and La Niñas, the Pacific Ocean phenomena that are not yet captured by climate models, and the longer term Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) and Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) which have cycle lengths of about 60 years.”

“Years of Living Dangerously” takes great liberties with the truth about forest fires. Such a one-sided presentation attempting to incite climate fear borders on license. It is also the second episode in which they discuss lost rainforests that were burned for Palm Oil. Yet despite Harrison Ford’s expose on corrupt government officials, the episode has still failed to mention the European Union alone has provided $11 billion dollars in biofuel subsidies and the bulk of that has subsidized palm oil for the biodiesel industry .

Is such distorted truth liberty or license? I suppose if no one is listening the question is moot.

Literature Cited

1. Keane, et al (2002) Cascading Effects of Fire Exclusion in

Rocky Mountain Ecosystems:A Literature Review. USDA Forest Service RMRS GTR-91.

2. Swetnam, T. W.; Baisan, C. H. 1996. Historical fire regime patterns

in the Southwestern United States since AD 1700

3. Westerling et al (2006) Warming and Earlier Spring Increase Western U.S. Forest Wildfire Activity Science, vol. 313

4. Schoennagel, T., (2005) ENSO and PDO Variability Affect Drought‑induced Fire Occurrence in Rocky Mountain Subalpine Forests. Ecological Applications, vol. 15, pp. 2000-2014

5. McCabe, G., et al., (2011) Influences of the El Niño Southern Oscillation and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation on the timing of the North American spring. International Journal of Climatology, doi:10.1002/joc.3400

6. Romme (1989) Historical Perspective on the Yellowstone Fires of 1988 Bioscienc, vol. 39

7. Chylek et al (2013) Imprint of the Atlantic multi-decadal oscillation and Pacific decadal oscillation on southwestern US climate: past, present, and future Climate Dynamics DOI 10.1007/s00382-013-1933-3

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April 25, 2014 8:03 pm

Mark Whitney
The Trenberth quote is from 938. Appell, D. (2013) Whither Global Warming? Has It Slowed Dpwn? The Yale Forum on Climate Change and the Media. http://www.yaleclimatemediaforum.org/2013/05/wither-global-warming-has-it-slowed-down/

John F. Hultquist
April 25, 2014 10:30 pm

Thanks Jim,
Just in case you need another event we were on evacuation drill for a worker-caused-fire (8/13/2012). Had the camper packed and hooked to the PU. We kept track of it and did not leave. Three weeks later a multitude of fires called the Table Mountain Complex resulted from a storm (9/8/2012) with thousands of lightening strikes.
About the Taylor Bridge Fire:
DNR’s fire investigation concluded that the fire was human caused and associated with the cutting and welding activity taking place on and below the deck of Bristol Bridge (also known as the Taylor Bridge) at the intersection of State Highway 10 and Taylor Road, southeast of Cle Elum. The activity was ongoing during a period of extreme fire danger, and without reasonable precautions like clearing away flammable material, any effort to control welding and cutting sparks, or having the proper fire equipment and trained personnel on-site.
http://www.dnr.wa.gov/RecreationEducation/News/Pages/2013_06_07_taylor_bridge_nr.aspx
Nice photo and story here:
http://www.yakimaherald.com/news/latestlocalnews/659677-8/taylor-bridge-fire-highlights-prevention-breakdown#print

John F. Hultquist
April 25, 2014 10:40 pm

In western Pennsylvania the sky darkened and the Sun turned orange. We had no idea why until a day or so later:
http://www.edmontonjournal.com/news/1950+monster+fire+burned+into+history/4823685/story.html

Alcheson
April 25, 2014 11:14 pm

pat says:
April 25, 2014 at 4:31 pm
“26 April: WaPo: Letter: Charles Krauthammer misses the mark on climate change
Charles Krauthammer is upset with my organization, Forecast the Facts, which organized 110,000 people to sign a petition calling on The Post and other newspapers to stop publishing misinformation on its opinion pages about climate change. In his April 11 op-ed column, “Thought police on patrol,” Krauthammer said that, by asking for factual accuracy, we are exhibiting “intolerance” and a “totalitarian” attitude.
Krauthammer is missing the mark. We are not asking for censorship.”
Seems to me you are asking for exactly what you claim you are not asking for… censorship.
You seem to think they WaPo should not be allowed to air any view with respect to climate that does not follow the CAGW meme. For example it would appear that you and the other 11,000 people (11,000x10each to get 110,000) do not want these facts to ever see the light of day.
1) No warming for 17+years
2) Sea level rise has been slowing recently, not accelerating
3) Global sea ice same now as the 1980s, global sea ice is NOT decreasing (Arctic has been decreasing but Antarctic has been increasing).
4) Planet is 11% greener and crop yields are way up since CO2 went from 300ppm to 400ppm
5) So far the rise in CO2 and temperatures has been net beneficial to humankind. Temps only about 1.5C higher than LIA and have flat-lined. Crop yields have benefitted.
6) No increase in tornadoes or hurricanes, in either severity or frequency. No increase in droughts or floods in either severity or frequency.
Basically, if it DOESNT support CAGW, to you that is NOT fit to print. I call that censorship and a totalitarian attitude. You can call it something else if you wish, but calling a horse a Unicorn doesn’t make it so. Krauthammer was right on the mark.

knr
April 26, 2014 3:49 am

‘Years of Living Dangerously’ Sorry what , Is it the latest Claude Van Damme straight to cheap DVD bin flim?

richard
April 26, 2014 3:58 am

adding to the chances of more fires in the US is the spread of Non-indigenous species.
http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/1999/01/environmental-and-economic-costs-associated-non-indigenous-species
“Similarly, European cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum) is dramatically changing the vegetation and fauna of many natural ecosystems. This annual grass has invaded and spread throughout the shrub-steppe habitat of the Great Basin in Idaho and Utah, predisposing the invaded habitat to fires (Kurdila 1995; Vitousek et al. 1996; Vitousek et al. 1997). Before the invasion of cheatgrass, fire burned once every 60 – 110 years, and shrubs had a chance to become well established. Now, fires occur about every 3 – 5 years;”
http://bioscience.oxfordjournals.org/content/54/7/677.full.pdf
“An example of a widespread invader that
has caused tremendous changes in fire regimes and other
ecosystem properties is the alien annual grass Bromus tectorum
in western North America. Its invasion across this vast landscape has increased fire frequency to the point that native shrub–steppe species cannot recover”
http://www.firescience.gov/projects/briefs/05-2-1-13_FSBrief107.pdf
“Exotic annual grasses and weeds have increased fire risk across the western U.S. and constitute one of the greatest hazardous fuel concerns in this arid region. They out-compete the more fi re-resistant, perennial native vegetation by germinating in the fall or winter, and consuming soil moisture and nutrients early during the subsequent growing season. When they set seed and die
in late spring they create a continuous carpet of dry, fine fuel that can ignite easily and carry fire rapidly. In contrast, native vegetation tends to grow in separated clumps and remains green much later into the summer, resulting in lower potential for fire spread.

Txomin
April 26, 2014 4:03 am

And, yet, the imdb page for ‘Years of Living Dangerously’ gives it a rating of over 8/10…

richard
April 26, 2014 4:08 am

More fires are needed not less.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_ecology
“Much of the southeastern United States was once open longleaf pine forest with a rich understory of grasses, sedges, carnivorous plants and orchids. The above maps shows that these ecosystems (coded as pale blue) had the highest fire frequency of any habitat, once per decade or less. Without fire, deciduous forest trees invade, and their shade eliminates both the pines and the understory. Some of the typical plants associated with fire include Yellow Pitcher Plant and Rose pogonia. The abundance and diversity of such plants is closely related to fire frequency. Rare animals such as gopher tortoises and indigo snakes also depend upon these open grasslands and flatwoods.[20] Hence, the restoration of fire is a priority to maintain species composition and biological diversity.[21]”

Richard M
April 26, 2014 5:01 am

If Trenberth took the time to look at the impact of natural factors this is what he might find based on RSS data.
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/rss/from/plot/rss/from/to:2005/trend/plot/rss/from:2005/to/trend
Computation of man-made vs natural warming components based on NOAA satellite data.
The trend from 1979-2005 during the +PDO was .16C/decade. The cooling from 2005 until present during the -PDO was .06C/decade. This gives us two equations with two unknowns if we assume the natural variation is equal and opposite.
1) X + Y = .16
2) X – Y = -.06, X = Y – 06
Substituting for X in 1): Y – .06 + Y = .16, 2Y = .22, Y = .11
Substituting for result in 1): X + .11 = .16, X = .05
This tells us the value of man-made warming is .05C/decade while the value of the PDO yields ±.11C/decade. This occurred while CO2 concentration went from 340 to 400 ppm over the 35 year period. CO2 would double at this rate (340 to 680) in 340/60 * 35 years = 192.5 years. At this rate we would see a temperature increase of around .05 * 19.2 = .96C by 2206.

April 26, 2014 5:38 am

How can you say that about forest fires? You’re not a climate scientist! Only climate scientists can see the real effect of climate on forest fires.

rogerknights
April 26, 2014 5:51 am

pat says:
April 25, 2014 at 4:22 pm
25 April: Fashion Times: Inigo Monzon: Nobel Prize Winner Plans To Reverse Climate Change
………………….
Pachauri was awarded with the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007 for his work with the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

So he’s still making that fallacious claim, despite the Nobel Foundation’s advisory not to. Donna, take note.

rogerknights
April 26, 2014 6:03 am

PS–I missed this. (He has form, doesn’t he?):

24 April: Tampa Tribune: Education: Nobel laureate sees hope for reversing climate change
Rajendra Pachauri can paint a pretty dour picture of the effect of climate change.
Rising sea levels. Melting polar ice. Heat waves and heavy rains. Dwindling water supplies. The movement of fish from what had been fertile fishing grounds to more hospitable waters.
Those aren’t concerns for the future – they’re happening now, said Pachauri, Nobel Prize-winning chairman of the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change…

Pamela Gray
April 26, 2014 8:01 am

Hart Mountain is one of those areas that was drastically and negatively altered by fire suppression. Of course they also threw in human directed unregulated grazing (as if there was NO grazing prior to domesticated cows…rrriiiiiight). As a result of this, antelope no longer had the kinds of grass and brush they needed for grazing and cover so they moved on. With controlled fires (and of course limited domesticated grazing) the antelope are back. So I call BS on global warming caused fire catastrophy. I will however say that such catastrophic burns are human caused. Modern humans don’t like fire but we need to let it burn folks. Whenever it wants to. And stop protecting the idiots who wanted a house in the far reaches of a forest surrounded by trees, living in nature, and singing kum baaaa yaaaaaaa. If they want to protect their investment, let them buy expensive fire insurance.
http://www.fws.gov/fire/fmp/region1/oregon/hart_mountain_nar.pdf

Gums
April 26, 2014 9:51 am

Salute all!
Go look up Colorado’s Hayman fire and then the Waldo Canyon fire, and smaller ones west of Colorado Springs in 2012. Don’t forget last year’s Black Forest fire because folks allowed all the trees to remain instead of thinning them ( controlled burns not possible die to high population density, so depended upon homeowner mitigation of the hazard).
The Hayman fire was positively cause by a human and she went to jail. Without a lot of population to “protect” it burned about like most of the historical fires before we got involved. Sadly, it still wiped out many summer cabins and such, but loss of life was almost nil. The Waldo fire has been presumed to be caused by a hiker or camper, but no proof yet. It burned and burned, then one day it jumped the last ridge from a Colorado Springs suburb and got a few hundred homes. Very low loss of humans, but still shows the danger of concentrating humans in the forest.
Colorado and other states out west have gone for thousands of years of dry conditions now and then and many “natural” fires. The “no burn” policy of those who “know better than us” has been instrumental preventing loss of trees and such, but then a real fire finally breaks out, whether caused by humans or a lightning strike. The result if a fuel-rich environment and the fire becomes a lot worse than during the natural fire era when the forest burned basically under the crowns of the trees.
out…..

thegriss
April 26, 2014 11:35 am

M ..
Actually , the 1998 ElNino (unrelated to CO2) caused a rise of approximately 0.25C in atmospheric temperature.
Now if you subtract that value from the RSS temps after the Elnino settled down by 2001, you get this…..
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/rss/from:1979/to:1997/plot/rss/from:1979/to:1997/trend/plot/rss/from:2001/offset:-.25/plot/rss/from:2001/trend/offset:-.25
As you can see, there is basically zero warming in the whole of the RSS record apart from the 1998 ElNino.. No CO2 effect at all. !!

David Ball
April 26, 2014 12:17 pm

A more accurate title for the producer and stars; The Years of Living Disingenuously.

April 26, 2014 1:28 pm

If increased atmospheric CO2 increases tree growth rates…
… wouldn’t that also accelerate the fire cycle?
It seems to me that the connection to climate is unnecessarily complex.
Restating my chain of logic:
1) Increased CO2 accelerates the life-cycle.
2) Fire is part of the life-cycle.
3) Therefore fires should increase in frequency to maintain the same level of function within the life-cycle.