How
Indonesia’s gigantic fires are making global warming worse
15
October, 2015
Experts
say that along with dramatic
global coral bleaching, thousands of
fires across Indonesia represents the next sign of an
intensifying global El Niño event.
And the consequences, in this
case, could affect the entire globe’s atmosphere.
That’s
because a large number of Indonesia’s currently raging
fires are consuming ancient stores of carbon-rich peat,
which is found in wetlands featuring organic layers full of dead
and partially decomposed plant life.
This
year, the very smoky peat burning has been simply massive — the
fires are estimated to have caused $
14 billion in damage so far,
and are causing hazardous
air conditions in
much of the area, including nearby Singapore. Millions of people have
been affected, and 120,000 have sought medical treatment for
respiratory illnesses, according to Weather Underground’s Jeff
Masters.
Indeed, the
2015 Indonesian fire season has so far featured a stunning 94,192
fires.
That’s more
Indonesian fires than at the same time in 2006,
a banner year both for fires and also for their carbon emissions
to the atmosphere.
Those
emissions are more than large enough to have global consequences.
Indeed, according to recent
calculations by Guido
van der Werf,
a researcher at VU University Amsterdam in the Netherlands who keeps
a database that
tracks the global emissions from wildfires, this year’s
Indonesian fires had given off an estimated 995 million metric
tons of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions as of Oct. 14.
The
number is an estimate, of course, and subject to “substantial
uncertainties” — but it’s also based on a well-developed
methodology for estimating wildfire emissions to the atmosphere based
upon satellite images of the fires themselves and the vegetation they
consume.
“Fire
emissions are already higher than Germany’s total CO2 emissions,
and the fire season is not over yet,” says van der Werf. He
provided this figure, which allows you to compare how much carbon
dioxide and other emissions Indonesian fires have put into the
atmosphere each year since 1997 with the annual fossil fuel emissions
profiles of various countries (including Indonesia itself):
As
you can see, 2015 is already a very notable year — and it
could get considerably worse. Van der Werf says he thinks that for
total Indonesian fire emissions, 2015 may ultimately nestle somewhere
between 2006 and the truly catastrophic year of 1997.
During
that year, according
to scientists
who studied its aftermath, fire emissions from Indonesia alone were
“equivalent to 13–40% of the mean annual global carbon emissions
from fossil fuels.”
And while
the emissions from wildfires in many parts of the world are at least
partially offset as trees and vegetation subsequently grow back and
pull carbon back out of the air again, that’s not so much the case
in Indonesia. “In Indonesia, what’s burning is for the large
part, peat layers that have been deposited over thousands of years.
So this is really a net source of emissions just like fossil fuels
are,” says van der Werf.
Thus,
peat emissions are, in a sense, similar to Arctic
permafrost emissions —
built up over vast stretches of time, the carbon contained in thawing
permafrost is also a new addition to the atmosphere if emitted.
Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo inspects a peatland clearing that was engulfed by fire during an inspection of a firefighting operation to control agricultural and forest fires in Banjar Baru in Southern Kalimantan province on Borneo island on September 23, 2015. ROMEO GACAD/AFP/Getty Images
What
the severe Indonesian fire years of 1997, 2006, and 2015 all have in
common is that they were El Niño years. El Niño is a critical
factor in exacerbating Indonesian fires, because it tends to
deprive the islands of needed rains and drive drought conditions.
Indeed,
the Indonesian fires are “one of the first severe impacts of the
strong El Niño that has been developing over the last
year,” according
to Columbia
University’s International Research Institute for Climate and
Society. And that also means the trouble probably isn’t over yet.
A current
forecast suggests
“a strong likelihood of drier-than-normal conditions over broad
areas of northern South America, the Caribbean, Indonesia and the
Philippines” through December.
But
it’s really the combination of El Niño and certain
agricultural practices — characterized as
“slash and burn” by NASA — that is at play here.
According
to Susan
Minnemeyer,
who is the mapping and data manager for Global Forest Watch Fires, a
project of the World Resources Institute, the blazes are the result
of using fire itself to clear land for agriculture, as well as the
draining of peat bogs and swamps – which makes them able to light
up once they are dried out.
“The
forests in Indonesia are generally not flammable, so these fires are
virtually all caused by people, or land clearing,” says Minnemeyer.
She adds that there is “little enforcement and little capacity to
actually put them out once they’ve started.”
The
total Indonesian fire emissions, says van der Werf, will show up in
atmospheric measurements of carbon dioxide this year — and may even
draw attention at the climate meetings that begin next month in
Paris.
After
all, according
to the
U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, as of 2011 the
world only had about 1,000 more gigatons of carbon dioxide to emit to
the atmosphere if we want a two-third chance of keeping warming below
2 degrees Celsius from pre-industrial levels.
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