Increasing Synchronicity of Global Extreme Fire Weather

Dec 19, 2025·
Cong Yin
Cong Yin
,
John Abatzoglou
,
Matthew Jones
,
Alison Cullen
,
Moji Sadegh
,
Juanle Wang
,
Yangxiaoyue Liu
· 0 min read
At AGU 2025
Abstract
Concurrent extreme fire weather creates favorable conditions for widespread large fires, which can complicate the coordination of fire suppression resources and degrade regional air quality. Here, we examine the patterns and trends of intra- and inter-regional synchronous fire weather (SFW) and explore their links to climate variability and air quality impacts. We find climatologically elevated intra-regional SFW in boreal regions, as well as inter-regional synchronicity among northern temperate and boreal regions. Significant increases in SFW occurred during 1979–2024, with more than a twofold increase observed in most regions. We estimate that over half of the observed increase is attributable to anthropogenic climate change. Internal modes of climate variability strongly influence SFW in several regions, including Equatorial Asia, which experiences 43 additional intra-regional SFW days during El Niño years. Furthermore, SFW is strongly correlated with regional fire-sourced PM2.5 in multiple regions globally. These findings highlight the growing challenges posed by SFW for firefighting coordination and human health.
Date
Dec 19, 2025 8:30 AM — 12:00 PM
Event
Location

New Orleans Ernest N. Morial Convention Center

900 Convention Center Blvd, New Orleans, LA 70130