Originally posted at ClimateREALISM

A few days ago, a wildfire started in north Texas and grew quickly, driven by strong southwesterly winds. Named the Smokehouse Creek Fire, it has burned more than 1.1 million acres and is now the largest wildfire in Texas history. The mainstream media has been quick to blame climate change for the fire, with headlines like this one from NBC News: Wildfires ravage Texas amidst climate change crisis, or this one from ABC13 in Houston: How climate change is increasing wildfire risks across Texas. These stories are false; multiple lines of real-world data refute any connection between these fires and climate change.
NBC News claims:
The Texas Panhandle is no stranger to face-blasting winds nor roller-coaster dips in temperature. But the fires would not have had the same chance to take off if not for unseasonably warm temperatures and dry conditions made more likely by climate change.
ABC13 claims:
Additionally, climate change could increase Texan’s risks for wildfires over the next 30 years. ABC13 Meteorologist Elyse Smith has previously covered this topic through ABC’s Weathering Tomorrow initiative, which uses data from our partners at the First Street Foundation. It shows how wildfire risk, as well as heat, flood, and wind risks, will be impacted by climate change through the year 2050.
If either of these news outlets had bothered to do a ‘fact check,’ they would find their claims are unsupported by real world data.
Data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration for Texas show that the state has experienced a declining trend in number of very hot days and a slight increase in precipitation (see Figures 1 and 2, below).

Figure 1 – From 1910 through 1964 the number of hot days was actually greater than the current period of time.

Figure 2 – From 1970 to the present, average annual precipitation for Texas increased.
With fewer hot days and increased precipitation recorded in the long-term climate records, the claim that Texas is more susceptible to wildfires now that in the past because of climate change is clearly false.
Both media outlets suggested that the area where the fires are is drier than normal. This too is false. Here is a map from InciWeb showing the location of the Smokehouse Creek Fire (circled in red) in Figure 3.

Figure 3 – location of the Smokehouse Creek Fire.
According to the US drought monitor, the area now beset by the wildfire is not abnormally dry and certainly not experiencing drought conditions:

Figure 4 – U.S. Drought Monitor map of Texas for Feb27, 2024. Note most of the upper Texas panhandle area is not in drought.
Nor is the adjacent region of Oklahoma caught up in the wildfire suffering under abnormally dry or drought conditions.
According to Climate at a Glance: U.S. Wildfires:
Wildfires, especially in arid parts of the United States, have always been a natural part of the environment, and they likely always will. Global warming did not create wildfires. In fact, wildfires have become less frequent and less severe in recent decades. One of the key contributing factors has been that the United States has experienced fewer droughts in recent decades than in periods throughout the twentieth century.
According to the National Park Service, wildfires in Texas have always been a part of the state’s history. However recently invasive species now cover much of the region. According to the Texas A&M Forest Service:
Invasive species cause many negative impacts to the Texas landscape, from the displacement of native trees to potentially wiping out entire species.
Much of the Texas panhandle region is overgrown with cedar, acacia and invasive mesquite trees which use up a lot of groundwater. Previously, natural fires in the region helped control the spread of this problem, but with modern fire suppression, fuel loads have increased.
Even the most recent International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assessment of global climate agrees. On Page 90 – Chapter 12 of the UN IPCC Sixth Assessment Report. Emergence of Climate Impact Drivers (CIDs) the table in Figure 5 shows the incidence of “Fire weather” has not emerged from climate change:
Figure 5: note that Fire Weather has not emerged from climate change being a driver.
Finally, recent satellite data show no correlation between wildfire acreage burned and carbon dioxide levels. In fact, global wildfire area burned declined substantially between 2000 to 2018, even as carbon dioxide levels increased. If climate change was driving an increase in wildfires you would see it in the global data, but it shows just the opposite.
Actual data and various lines of hard evidence show that there is no connection between climate change and the wildfires now ravaging parts of north Texas and Oklahoma, or anywhere else for that matter. Sadly, once again the media is pushing the “climate catastrophe,” narrative in which every extreme weather event or natural disaster is caused by climate change, despite the clear evidence that this is false. In this case, rather than doing investigative due diligence, neither NBC nor ABC bothered to check facts before publishing these scare stories, which suggests that their reporters and editors are either lazy, incompetent, blinded by political ideology, or all three.

Anthony Watts is a senior fellow for environment and climate at The Heartland Institute. Watts has been in the weather business both in front of, and behind the camera as an on-air television meteorologist since 1978, and currently does daily radio forecasts. He has created weather graphics presentation systems for television, specialized weather instrumentation, as well as co-authored peer-reviewed papers on climate issues. He operates the most viewed website in the world on climate, the award-winning website wattsupwiththat.com.
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Amen, Anthony. Also, as I like to point out to friends, the only discernible actual “climate change”, is a minute warming on the average that they couldn’t detect if experienced themselves.
The warmer Michigan winters with much less snow have been VERY easy to notice since the late 1970s. And we love our climate change.
Our summers are not hotter. In fact last summer was the coolest summer, with the most rain, since I moved here in 1977.
Driveway Snow Shoveling Index
Late 1970s – up to once a week
2021 / 2022 winter 3 times
2022 / 2023 winter 3 times
2023 / 2024 winter 1 time for 10 minutes so far
Just like California and Australia, bad wildlands management, first and last.
So it is “CLIMATE CHANGE” that is causing the wildfires! (It is just a second order effect.)
When Green governments are elected they tend to focus only on CLIMATE CHANGE, and ignore all of the core functions of good governance.
The consequences are:
More acres burned – due to poor land management
More potholes in the roads – saving the world is much more important than fixing the potholes
Loss of manufacturing jobs – due to tripling energy costs
I am sure that list could be greatly expanded.
What is burning?
Where I live in central Washington State “cheat grass” is an issue. Further, the growth of all plants is relentless. There is much fuel that can burn.
Next, a fire needs fuel, oxygen, and a source of ignition. Temperature if relatively unimportant. So what was the spark?
Next – wind! Big Wind – big fast moving fire
“What is burning?”
I do a lot of work just north of those fires.
In addition to the trees listed by Mr. Watts, there is also shortgrass prairie in the area which is typically buffalo grass and some of the grama species.
There are also yucca plants that have big circles of dry leaves elevated off the ground.
Finally, many of the fences and ditches are absolutely lined with extremely dry tumble weeds.
I have watched burning tumble weeds blow across the highway. I can’t imagine designing a more efficient incendiary device if you have a good wind and need to burn the maximum number of acres.
Thanks for the comments on this issue; and those below.
For those not familiar with tumble weeds, I suggest an ‘images’
search with: tumble weeds against a fence line
A tally (15 years ago) of wildland fires in the Western USA showed about 84% involved human actions (see Ron Long’s comment). A storm with lighting can ignite dozens of fires in a couple of hours. Along I-90, in central Washington, the roadside grass ignition is a several-times-a-season occurrence. Once I had an overlook spot along the Columbia River to watch planes and helicopters fetching water; a 2 hour delay for me.
I forgot about the tumbleweeds. The pan handle is lousy with them. They’ll pile up against a barbed wire fence 10 ft. tall and just as wide.
Some 12-13 years ago, a severe drought in South Dakota saw the town of Mobridge (pop 3000+) on the Missouri river, buried in tumbleweed. They used heavy equipment to remove them before a spark burned the town down. It could have been a real disaster.
What was the spark? It appears, from comments in the article by Watts, and other similar reports, that there is a 90% probability it was a human-provided spark. The human element appears to be becoming more intentional, arson, and less accidental.
The last two fires in the region where a cause was determined were both human caused.
One was high winds knocked down a power line. The other was a person pulled off the highway and their catalytic convertor caught the grass on fire. A state trooper saw it happen and the fire got away before fire trucks could reach the remote location and contain the fire.
The European Environment Agency, Mediterranean Region (Portugal, Spain,France, Italy and Greece) 2022 report said “96% of wildfires in the EU are caused by human actions” ie arson, accident or irresponsibility
Absolutely agree, nothing to do with climate change.
Tho they could have been heavily contributed to by the increased CO2 directly by making plant growth more robust and more likely in an area that would otherwise not have been as much at risk…
Still… don’t build houses in a brushfire. The amazing thing about having opposable thumbs is that we can move the impending brushfire somewhere else.
There have been some articles in various places that claim homeowners in Australia are fined, every year, if they have cleared a firebreak around their homes. Some pay the fines and save their property when the inevitable fire comes, the majority do as told and loose their property. This sound too incredibly stupid to be true but then so do many other things in recent years. Anyone know if that really happens in Australia?
youre allowed 12foot from fencelines and around home. which is woefully inadequate . the time it takes to get approvals to cut a damned tree down is a farce. apply ..wait.wait some more, eventually get “inspection” wait wait n wait some more , eventually they might? say yes
so people just cut and wait, sometimes no one really notices and its all good. othertimes theres a dobber
You’re also supposed to build houses with block foundations, a basement, metal siding and metal roofs.
The issue has been reported on Jo Nova’s site — not recently.
joannenova.com.au
Doubt you will hear much about wildfires in Eastern Australia this year.
Raining again in the Hunter Valley. 🙁
Lawns that are usually dry and thirsty at this time of year… are growing mushrooms. !
And grass….. LOTS and LOTS of grass !
And grapes, I hope! 🙂
heard a snippet on news in aus today that someones suing the powerco for their pole falling over n starting it off
President Biden attributed the wildfires in Texas and Oklahoma to Human-caused Climate Change. Biden says the wildfires have an obvious connection to human-caused climate change, and anyone who does not believe in it are neanderthals. Biden can see the CO2 connection in a random wildfire and scoffs at people who do not. Biden is obviously delusional.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-calls-climate-change-deniers-neanderthals-during-border-speech-texas
Biden calls climate change deniers ‘Neanderthals’ during border speech in Texas
By Louis Casiano Fox News
Published February 29, 2024 8:35pm EST
Old Uncle Joe should not be showing disrespect for Neanderthals.
The only connection of wildfires amd climate change in the past 50 years is the fires deliberately set by climate zealots.
Up to 90% of forest fores are caused by humans, usually accidental fires
There is no logical connection between the slight warming of a nation and the number of forest fires.
People do not change their behaviors because the temperature, mainly at night gets slightly warmer.
Forest fires are blamed on climate change because almost everything bad is blamed on climate change.
Tp the Global Whiners, climate change means a prediction of CAGW, which went public in 1979
The actual warming since 1975 has been very pleasant. We love the huge reduction of snow in Michigan.
The Global Whiners do everything they can to prevent people from thinking about the past 48 years of pleasant global warming.
Their predictions of future global warming doom, since 1979, were losing their power as a boogeyman. So a few years ago the Climate Howlers started demonizing every bad weather event as “proof of the coming global warming crisis”.
Now bad weather is climate change
But good weather is just weather
Climate propaganda does not have to make sense, or be supported by data, for leftists to believe it. The claims just have to be repeated again and again. And they are. For over 40 years.
US 2024 Wildfire Data
Good news (rarely reported in the mass media, of course)
The National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) statistics showed that in 2023, there were 56,580 wildfires burning 2.7 million acres (2023) nationally. These are both significantly lower than the 2022 statistics of 68,988 wildfires and 7.6 million acres burned (2022).
Tony Heller does a good job debunking the “climate crisis causes more wildfires” meme
“the largest blaze in state history “ | Real Climate Science
There was a 10 million acre wildfire in Texas in 1903.
Also, see …
Chinchaga fire – Wikipedia
… in northern British Columbia and Alberta in the summer and early fall of 1950.
I remember the smoke covering Western Pennsylvania.
Our son recently moved to Austin, buying a house NW of town on top of a small mesa surrounded by scrub-filled arroyos. Lovely neighborhood. The first thought that crossed my mind was, what a freaking fire trap, and I started looking around for hydrants, ponds, other safety measures. Building fire-safe in that area would probably double the cost per house and require double the annual grounds maintenance. Removing the trees in the yards would remove their shade and add to AC costs. I get it, but those issues are far more at play here than the air temp. It’s a freaking desert, people, and those homes in the panhandle are build on the grassy plains. Plains grasses not only will regularly burn, that is part of the natural cycle. Notice in the coverage the trees are still standing and green around those destroyed homes. The grasses will be back by the end of summer. But the structures, not so much.
“on top of a small mesa surrounded by scrub-filled ”
Homeowners in such situations often throw prunings over the edge and add to the fuel. Fire moves up-hill easily and throws burning embers. In western Wenatchee, WA this issue was compounded by nice-looking Cedar shake roofs. Oops!
Search for: Washington Sleepy Hollow Fire photos
Dry grass burns? Who knew? It’s a lesson learned in Hawaii not that long ago.
a) Are the 1930s missing a lot of hot days? Seems to me that I’ve read a number of news articles about serial progression of hot days in Texas.
b) I haven’t seen any word of arson or accidental human cause of the fires? e.g., a cigarette butt tossed from a vehicle’s window?
e.g. 2, I have a couple hundred yards of suburban road exposure. Tossed cigarette butts are the most common litter I pick up, with most of them having been tossed while lit, not stubbed or stepped on. Irresponsible smokers.
Ranchers intentionally burn off range land in Texas and Oklahoma. It has a beneficial effect. Normally they wait until the first rains of March to do it. The main culprit this time was a wind storm.
Same kind of fire happened around 10 years ago.
Prairie fires are good for the land. And there isn’t much out there. It’s all range land.