In early February, the deadliest South American wildfires in a century swept through Valparaiso, Chile, killing more than a hundred people.
In the United States, mercifully little land burned — only 2.6 million acres, which was less than half the recent average.
But in Canada, fires ate through more than twice as much forest as the country’s previous modern record, the total burn scar large enough that more than half the world’s countries could fit inside.
In Greece, one fire forced the country’s largest-ever evacuation, and another became the largest fire in the history of the European Union.
And in the United States, especially, you increasingly hear a somewhat contrarian explanation that emphasizes fire suppression rather than warming.
Persons:
“, Stephen Pyne, Daniel Swain
Organizations:
European Union, Sydney
Locations:
Valparaiso, Chile, Lahaina, Maui, Hawaii’s, United States, Canada, Greece, Australia, McMurray , Alberta, Hawaii, Boulder County, Colo