+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

Wildfires are burning from the the Amazon to the Arctic — Here's why you should be worried

Aug 22, 2019, 13:59 IST
Business Insider India
Satellites observed thick plumes of smoke rising from dozens of large wildfires in SiberiaNASA Earth Observatory
  • The Earth’s Arctic region and the Amazon rainforest are on fire all thanks to climate change.
  • The peripheries of the Northern Hemisphere are heating up twice as fast as the rest of the Earth while the Amazon has so many different wildfires brewing that the resulting smoke extends for 1.2 million square miles.
  • Wildfires in Alaska, Siberia, Russia and Greenland are releasing a record amount of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and the Amazonia wildfires are burning up the ‘lungs of the planet’ — making a bad problem even worse.
Advertisement
If you think that climate change is making your summers hotter, be thankful that you don’t live in the Arctic or in the Amazon.

Amazonia — the entirety of the Amazon rainforest — has 10,000 separate wildfires that started burning this very week. The collective smoke from the wildfires created a layer of smoke that stretches for over 1.2 million square million darkening skies over the South American continent.


In the northern hemisphere, the entire region — stretching from Siberia all the way to Alaska — is heating up twice as fast as the rest of the Earth. It’s gotten so hot that it’s literally on fire.

It’s not that wildfires are uncommon in the Arctic region, in fact they happen every summer. But this time around, even the The World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) called it ‘unprecedented’ noting that its monitoring service, CAMS, has tracked over 100 wildfires in the Arctic Circle.
Large wildfires continue to burn in Alaska seen from space on ThursdayCopernicus, WMO
In both cases, the burning infernos have gotten so out of hand that you can see even see the wildfires from space.

Advertisement

Fires burning over Brazil as seen from spaceNOAA

The lungs of the planet

The Amazon rainforest has been dubbed the ‘lungs of the planet’ since its innate vastness — 5.4 million square kilometers — produces 20% of the world’s oxygen.


And, right now, since its burning instead of breathing — it’s producing carbon dioxide and other harmful gases instead.


The record breaking wildfires come in the footsteps of The Guardian reporting that the Amazon shrunk by 1,345 square kilometers in the month of July — twice the area of a city like Tokyo.
Advertisement

The area of around three football fields was disappearing every minute according to data from Brazilian satellites.

Earth’s cushion against climate change on the brink of collapse

Aside endangering wildlife and their habitats, the fires released an exorbitant amount of carbon dioxide.

In June alone, fires in the Arctic released over 50 megatonnes of carbon dioxide into the Earth’s atmosphere, according to the WMO — the same as Sweden’s emissions over a whole year.
Wildfire in the Qeqqata Kommunia, Greenland on July 14Pierre Markuse/Flickr
Mark Parrington, a senior scientist with Europe’s Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring service, notes that since then, carbon dioxide released from fires in the Arctic has reached 100 megatons — breaking previous records.

It affects you even if you don’t live on the North Pole

Advertisement
The impact of these fires is crossing borders.

Russia, for instance, is the victim of the smoke plumes degrading the air quality in some of its cities according to NASA’s Earth Observatory.

Wildfires in Russia on July 21Pierre Markuse/Flickr
Permafrost, or peat, in the region stores a lot of the carbon dioxide that’s released on Earth. While the peat isn’t in the direct line of fire — no pun intended — it’s still left will less cover against direct sunlight. This increases the odds of it thawing out and releasing all of its stored carbon dioxide back into the atmosphere.

Amazonia fires seen from space by NASA satellitesEarth Observatory/NASA

The situation in Brazil is as such that even though the country owns most of the Amazon rainforest, its President Jair Bolsonaro has stated that saving Amazonia is not on his list of priorities.

And, even though Brazil might not want to deal with the problem, the darkening skies and overwhelming smoke extends to Paraguay and Bolivia as well.
Advertisement

See also:
A devastating Arctic temperature rise that could submerge coastal cities and trigger species extinction is now locked in

Rapid melting sea-ice in the Arctic may hamper India’s monsoon pattern: Study
You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article