September 21, 2022
Journal Article

Widespread wildfires over western United States in 2020 linked to emissions reductions during COVID-19

Abstract

Widespread wildfires struck western United States in 2020, directly damaging properties and threatening human lives. Meanwhile, the COVID-19 pandemic rapidly spread across the globe in 2020, which disrupted human activities and resulted in substantial reductions in anthropogenic emissions. Here, we investigate the effects of the emissions reductions of aerosols, precursors, and greenhouse gases during the pandemic on wildfire weather conditions in 2020 over western United States by using an earth system model together with observational data. We show that the COVID-19 emissions reductions in model experiments increased surface air temperature and decreased precipitation and relative humidity due to a weakened moisture transport, which explains 10-40% of the observed increase in the risk of wildfires over western United States in 2020. This study suggests that COVID-19-related abrupt emissions reductions have an unexpected influence on wildfires, highlighting a different but important role of human activities in affecting wildfire risks.

Published: September 21, 2022

Citation

Ren L., Y. Yang, H. Wang, P. Wang, X. Yue, and H. Liao. 2022. Widespread wildfires over western United States in 2020 linked to emissions reductions during COVID-19. Geophysical Research Letters 49, no. 15:Art. No. e2022GL099308. PNNL-SA-172590. doi:10.1029/2022GL099308