"The solution to dangerous, out-of-control wildfires in California is addressing the root cause: 'excess fuel load' from bad forest management. Focusing on climate change, a minor variable that we 'have no near-term control over, is a craven political ploy. ...
[T]emperatures have risen 1 degree C in the last 150 years. Is it really possible that that amount of warming makes dangerous wildfires inevitable? No. ... The negative effect of rising global temperatures on California wildfire susceptibility in particular is dubious because past centuries had far more fire-prone climates. The Palmer Drought Index shows only a slight increase in California drought since 1900.
"Historical evidence shows us that prior to man-made CO2 emissions CA experienced regular 'megadroughts' that could last over a century. The modern era has been very lush by comparison. Even if CA could lower global CO2 levels we could easily suffer a regional drought. ...
"The root cause of today’s wildfires is terrible forest management. Policymakers have prevented controlled burns, debris clearing, and logging — jacking up the 'fuel load' to incredibly dangerous levels. ... The path forward is simple: focus on the main cause, forest management, which is totally within our control. Stop pretending that lowering CO2 levels would bring about some fire-free paradise–and that it is possible near-term. Stop mandating 'unreliables.' Decriminalise nuclear."~ Alex Epstein from his post 'Bad Forest Management, and Not Climate Change, is the Root Cause of California Fires'
Saturday, 11 January 2025
"The root cause of today’s wildfires is terrible forest management."
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2 comments:
Good essay, which we can agree with. However the conservative folk celebrating this destruction , death and suffering of people and animals is disgraceful.
Bad forest management might be a more plausible contributing factor than 1 degrees temperature rise. Then again, the connection to either could be weak. Sometimes shit just happens, and there's no political cause, or anyone in particular to blame. It's only because of our success the past 100 years or so in combating the perils of nature do most now take our relative safety for granted, and assume someone must be negligent when disasters happen.
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