Sorry, Los Angeles Times, Climate Change Isn’t Driving Georgia’s Wildfires

By Linnea Lueken

A recent article at the Los Angeles Times (LAT) titled, “Georgia blaze shows how climate change has led to more wildfires in the East,” claims that the Eastern United States is suffering from more extreme and frequent wildfires due to climate change. This is false. Data show no trend in an increase in fires, though it is not unreasonable to be concerned about fire fuel buildup from hurricane damage.

The LAT writes that “wildfires are becoming more intense, frequent and damaging in the East, such as last week’s blaze that destroyed dozens of homes in Georgia, fire scientists said.”

The fire scientists attribute the fires to “climate change causing fuel to dry out and be more flammable, a record drought, tens of millions of tons of dead trees from Hurricane Helene, and the vast area where dense forests and high numbers of people try to coexist,” with the article really emphasizing the climate angle.

There are a few parts to this claim: are wildfires getting worse in Georgia, and are climate conditions in Georgia becoming more conducive to fire outbreaks, and is this because of global climate change?

In support of its claim the LAT article relies on a 2023 study, “Increasing Large Wildfire in the Eastern United States,” published in Geophysical Research Letters by fire ecologists from the University of Florida.

The study, especially for the state of Georgia in particular, uses a seriously flawed methodology.

Their data were taken from the Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity Database (MTBS) a joint project of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), the U.S. Forest Service, and the U.S. Geological Survey. In particular, it uses the MTBS’ “burned area boundary product” to account for wildfire perimeter data combined with the USDA’s Fire Program Analysis Fire Occurrence Database for information on how the fires were started (human or lightning).

The study specifically targets what they define as “large” wildfires, relying entirely on statistical analysis rather than a straightforward mapping of the number of fires in a region and totaling up the acreage burned across time.

Statistical modeling and analysis can be reasonable, when data are sparce or incomplete, but is unnecessary for measurements like this when straightforward measured data exist. Relying on p-values and tau can sometimes “find” a trend where there really isn’t one, especially if a year has “freak” wildfires that really are not indicative of any long-term trend.

The study looks not at particular states but EPA determined “ecoregions,” and Georgia is crossed by three of their listed regions that span very long longitudinal (North-South) areas, designated as the “Piedmont” region, “Southeastern Plains,” and “Southern Coastal Plain,” the latter two making up most of the state. With a wildfire count of three, the Southern Coastal Plain has the highest total wildfire of all the ecoregions examined.

An examination of the MTBS data using their exploration tool to chart the annual burn severity for Georgia shows this as an output:

There are a few years in that dataset that show spikes in burn areas, all of which correspond to periods of extended multi-year droughts combined with known heavy fuel loads.

Long periods of drought are a natural part of Georgia’s climate, especially in the coastal plains, because of a periodic and known pressure system offshore called “The Bermuda High.” When it comes closer to shore and extends into the Southeast and is combined with La Niña years, severe drought follows. There is no particular long-term trend of extended periods of drought in the state, with the driest years in state history occurred in the 1930s, 50s, and 80s, decades of greenhouse gas emissions and global warming ago.

Looking closer at more on-the-ground wildfire reporting, the National Interagency Fire Center keeps state by state wildfire data. From 2006 to 2025 there is again no particular trend in fires in Georgia. In fact, the number of fires seem to have declined over the past 20 years.

Figure 2: NIFC data on Georgia wildfires, 2006-2025. From https://www.nifc.gov/nicc/predictive-services/intelligence

This is unsurprising since data from NASA and the European Space Agency both show a marked decline in wildfire globally over the past few decades. Georgia is part of the larger trend of less severe, less frequent wildfires across the planet.

Also, fires that burn larger areas are not necessarily because of conditions resulting from climate change, but are heavily influenced by land-use changes and, as the paper acknowledges, human encroachment on wild areas and an excess of burnable material. This is particularly a problem for Georgia right now, as the LAT article explains “13,954 square miles of forest land was hit by Hurricane Helene, downing more than 26 million tons of pine and 30 million tons of hardwood,” which an interviewed scientist called “a ticking time bomb.” This is especially true in drought conditions. But this is a problem that can be fixed with the clearing of that burnable material. It is a local, politically induced environmental problem, not a climate problem. The timber could have been recovered and used. Instead, Georgia officials decided to let nature take its course.

As this post is written, two wildfires are burning in Georgia that are very severe. They have already destroyed more than 100 homes and tens of thousands of acres of land. The fact of the matter is that wildfires are massively influenced by land use and management, and they can get out of control when conditions are right. High winds and drought have considerably added to the spread of these fires, similar to the conditions in 2007. But since there is no long-term trend in worsening drought in Georgia, rather just a couple of bad years similar to dozens recorded historically, and there is no evidence climate change is changing wind speeds in Georgia or elsewhere, climate change can’t be blamed for the present fire conditions.

There is no need to focus on climate change when discussing these natural disasters, especially when it is the supposed villain in the climate discussion – petroleum products—which make it possible to fight these fires in the first place by fueling aircraft and vehicles, and delivering fast reliable power to aid efforts and disaster cleanup. Perhaps, when reporting on disasters, especially disasters out of state, the Los Angeles Times should do a little research, rather than referencing a single, flawed study to claim a climate induced disaster is happening. Real-world data trumps both theory and statistical analyses and its time the LAT acknowledged that.

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14 Comments
May 1, 2026 10:30 pm

This image

comment image

used to be Here Looks like someone didn’t want anybody to see it anymore.

May 1, 2026 10:33 pm

Many articles from services like AP and other mainstream publishers show frequent exploitation of the climate angle. I suspect this has more to do with editor’s selection bias than any connection to facts. Writers in those environments may or may not believe what they are writing but are savvy enough to know what will sell to their management.

Alan M
Reply to  Shoki
May 2, 2026 2:15 am

Plus, it is so easy for local politicians and agencies to blame climate change rather than admit to their poor management being the cause

Reply to  Alan M
May 2, 2026 4:32 am

Climate change is a Get Out Of Jail Free card for dummies who don’t know what they’re doing and screw everything up in the process.

Mary Jones
May 2, 2026 1:16 am

I thought this study – published in Feb2025 – might be of interest:
A fire deficit persists across diverse North American forests despite recent increases in area burned

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-56333-8

Editor
May 2, 2026 1:21 am

Every time they blame the climate for a problem, they divert people away from any solution. For wildfire, the primary solution is clearing around housing. What is particularly nasty about the climate alarmists is that clearing around housing would work really well for wildfire protection if they were right, but they still don’t recommend it. It is difficult not to believe that the alarmists want people’s houses to burn because that helps their political agenda. Like I said, nasty. Very nasty.

Dave Andrews
Reply to  Mike Jonas
May 2, 2026 8:52 am

Michel Cembelest wrote about the Palisades fire in JP Morgan’s ‘!5th Annual Energy Paper’ (March 2025)

” From 1990 -2020 California built 1.5m homes in the wildfire-urban interface and from 2020 to 2022 insurance companies declined to renew 2.8m homeowner policies in California”

“The bottom line: why don’t fire fighting staffing levels, grid management policies, controlled burns, fire resistant materials requirements and other policies reflect the long standing fire-related risks in the LA area?”

Seems those questions are equally relevant elsewhere

Herman Pope
May 2, 2026 1:27 am

This was written:
There is no need to focus on climate change when discussing these natural disasters, especially when it is the supposed villain in the climate discussion – petroleum products—which make it possible to fight these fires in the first place by fueling aircraft and vehicles, and delivering fast reliable power to aid efforts and disaster cleanup.

This is implied, but should be listed, the availability and use of water is greatly enhanced by use of reliable power.

May 2, 2026 5:24 am

I’m not hearing of any wildfires here in New England. The best way to end forest wild fires is excellent forest management. But the greens hate forestry. They want to lock up all the forests to serve no purpose other than sequester carbon.

John Hultquist
May 2, 2026 8:22 am

I do not know the causes of the current Georgia fires. There are reports of arson for many State fires, including a series set by a man in DeKalb County — the eastern part of the Atlanta area. Some studies have shown that over 80% of fires are ignited by something humans do or fail to do.
I live in a fire-prone area of WA State east of the Cascade Mtns. Being “fire wise” is a criterion of existence.
Find: NFPA’s Firewise USA® program
{I’ll spend at least an hour today clearing fuel from a spot about 100 feet from the house.}

Curious George
May 2, 2026 8:54 am

Climate change surely drives wildfires. It had done so for 13,000 years and probably longer.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Curious George
May 2, 2026 2:55 pm

I would say weather drives wildfires, not climate change.

Mary Jones
Reply to  Curious George
May 4, 2026 2:42 pm

Climate change surely drives wildfires. It had done so for 13,000 years and probably longer.

“Climate” is defined as the average weather in an area over a 30-year period. Since the average changes incrementally every single year, “climate change” cannot be blamed as the driver of wildfires.

In fact, North America is currently is a wildfire deficit – there are FAR fewer wildfires now than there were pre-1880, and the ones that do occur burn FAR less acreage than pre-1880.

sciguy54
May 10, 2026 8:39 am

Just wondering here. In the recent past, huge acreages in the southeast were managed as “paper plantations”, with large areas clear-cut for pulp wood on a regular basis, those cleared areas serving as partial firebreaks. I wonder how the “save the paper” movement has changed the management of these areas?