Jennifer Balch makes the media rounds to talk wildfires, smoke, climate change
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This article has been updated to include events posted after September 17, 2020.
As large fires blaze across the landscape of the American west, NCCASC University Director Jennifer Balch has been fielding numerous media requests for her expertise in wildfire science. In addition to two new publications and her upcoming presentation at a National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, Medicine workshop, highlights from the last several weeks include:
Mashable: 3 big wildfire questions, answered, Sept. 24, 2020
National Academies of Sciences Engineering Medicine: Wildland Fires: Towards Improved Understanding and Forecasting of Air Quality Impacts – A Workshop, "Our changing fire regimes", Wednesday, September 23, 2020
New York Times: We’ll Have to Learn to Live With Smoke. Here’s Why., Sept. 23, 2020
New York Times: Climate Disruption Is Now Locked In. The Next Moves Will Be Crucial., Sept. 22, 2020
Reuters: Fierce, frequent, climate-fueled wildfires may decimate forests worldwide, Sept. 21, 2020
National Geographic: The science connecting wildfires to climate change: A heating-up planet has driven huge increases in wildfire area burned over the past few decades., Sept. 17, 2020
CNBC: Climate change is fueling wildfires in the West, ravaging local economies, Sept. 17, 2020
BYU Radio: How Humans Are Making Wildfire Season Worse in the West, Sept. 17, 2020
New York Times: It’s Not Just the West. These Places Are Also on Fire., Sept. 16, 2020
5280: Colorado Wildfire Smoke Has Been Unprecedented Lately. Get Used to It, Sept. 16, 2020
BBC News/Mundo: Incendios en California: por qué cada año son peores y qué dicen los expertos sobre el futuro climático de la quinta economía mundial, Sept. 15, 2020
PBS Newshour: How climate change exacerbates wildfires in the American west, Sept. 14, 2020
CNN: Fire scientist Jennifer Balch says that conventional firefighting alone cannot get ahead of wildfires, Sept. 14, 2020
KUNC: Colorado Edition: Feeling the Heat, Aug. 26, 2020 (podcast)
NC CASC team members partner with Earth Lab and CIRES partners to compile a list of resources on current fires and air quality: How Bad is the Smoke? Current Fires and Air Quality Resources: Top 10 ways to get up-to-date information on fires and air quality, Aug. 25, 2020
CPR News: Colorado Wildfires Are Climate Change ‘In The Here And Now’ — And A Sign Of Summers To Come, Aug. 25, 2020
AP News: Science Says: Climate change, people stoke California fires, Aug. 25, 2020
Recent publications:
N. Mietkiewicz, J. K. Balch, T. Schoennagel, S. Leyk, L. A. St. Denis, and B. A. Bradley, “In the Line of Fire: Consequences of Human-Ignited Wildfires to Homes in the U.S. (1992–2015)", Fire, vol. 3, no. 3, Art. no. 3, Sep. 2020, doi: 10.3390/fire3030050
M. E. Cattau, C. Wessman, A. Mahood, and J. K. Balch, “Anthropogenic and lightning-started fires are becoming larger and more frequent over a longer season length in the U.S.A.", Global Ecology and Biogeography, vol. 29, no. 4, pp. 668–681, 2020, doi: 10.1111/geb.13058