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  • Commodities: Silver on a knife-edge, peak demand before peak oil?

    Commodities: Silver on a knife-edge, peak demand before peak oil?
    Business Intelligence Middle East (press release)
    UAE. Financial and commodity markets stabilized at the end of a week which was spent waiting for the EU summit. After many failed attempts the expectations were so low that when EU leaders announced some new measures the market breathed a sigh of
    See all stories on this topic »

    Business Intelligence Middle East (press release)
    UAE. Financial and commodity markets stabilized at the end of a week which was spent waiting for the EU summit. After many failed attempts the expectations were so low that when EU leaders announced some new measures the market breathed a sigh of
    See all stories on this topic »

  • VIDEO: proud to be tackling climate change (GET UP)

    VIDEO: proud to be tackling climate change (GET UP)

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    GetUp! info@getup.org.au
    7:30 PM (1 hour ago)

    to me
    What do a former liberal leader; a Wallabies star and a world-renowned conservationist have in common? Watch this video to find out.

    Dear NEVILLE,

    From today, Australia finally has a price on pollution, and we reckon that’s something to be proud of.

    Well-loved Australian leaders have come together in this new video to mark the milestone. It’s a great antidote to the negativity we’ll hear so much of this week, and a reminder of why we’re tackling climate change in the first place.

    Let’s share it with friends, family and colleagues this week.

    You’ll recognise many of the faces in this video, but Wallabies star David Pocock really stands out. David is the kind of articulate, thoughtful young climate champion the whole country should hear more from. Let’s get behind him.

    We’ve pencilled in advertising spots for this video during next weekend’s Rugby Union fixtures. If 1,500 of us can each chip $30, we’ll be able to ensure hundreds of thousands of rugby fans see David’s leadership off the pitch as well as on it.

    Thanks, and congratulations to all who have campaigned for climate action,
    the GetUp! team.

    This video was made with our good friends at the Australian Youth Climate Coalition; WWF-Australia; and Australian Conservation Foundation. They all have been campaigning long and hard for a safer climate and deserve congratulations for being part of the movement that has achieved this price on pollution.


    GetUp is an independent, not-for-profit community campaigning group. We use new technology to empower Australians to have their say on important national issues. We receive no political party or government funding, and every campaign we run is entirely supported by voluntary donations. If you’d like to contribute to help fund GetUp’s work, please donate now! If you have trouble with any links in this email, please go directly to www.getup.org.au. To unsubscribe from GetUp, please click here. Authorised by Simon Sheikh, Level 2, 104 Commonwealth Street, Surry Hills NSW 2010

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  • EU’s carbon allocation scheme and Scandinavia’s carbon taxes have not reduced greenhouse gas emissions

    ScienceDaily: Severe Weather News


    EU’s carbon allocation scheme and Scandinavia’s carbon taxes have not reduced greenhouse gas emissions

    Posted: 29 Jun 2012 09:03 AM PDT

    The European Union implemented a cap and trade scheme in 2005 to help it fulfil its obligations under the first phase of the Kyoto Protocol for reducing carbon emissions. The Scandinavian nations had independently imposed a carbon tax in the 1990s as part of their effort to reduce carbon emissions. US researchers have tracked the carbon disclosures from both regions of Europe and found that neither the EU’s carbon allocation scheme nor Scandinavia’s carbon taxes have made any significant impact on reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

  • climate code red UPDATES

    climate code red UPDATES


    Climate News

    Posted: 30 Jun 2012 11:38 PM PDT

    Week ending 1 July 2012

    The U.S. surface temperature map from Unisys at 4 pm, June 29, 2012, shows 100° temperatures stretching almost continuously from California eastward to the Carolinas
    PICKS OF THE WEEK

    While Colorado burns, Washington fiddles
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/jun/29/while-colorado-burns-washington-fiddles
    Bill McKibben, Guardian, 29 June 2012
    Drought, wildfires, storms, floods – climate change is happening, but the real disaster is our Big Energy-owned politicians’ inaction
    AND
    US wildfires are what global warming really looks like, scientists warn
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/jun/29/us-wildfires-global-warming-scientists
    Reuters/Guardian, 29 June 2012
    The Colorado fires are being driven by extreme temperatures, which are consistent with IPCC projections
    AND
    Massive ‘Debilitating’ Heat Wave Expands Eastward
    http://www.climatecentral.org/news/debilitating-heat-wave-expands-eastward
    AND
    NBC Meteorologist On Record Heat Wave: “If We Did Not Have Global Warming, We Wouldn’t See This.”
    http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2012/06/30/509246/nbc-meteorologist-on-record-heat-wave-if-we-didnt-have-global-warming-we-wouldnt-see-this

    Greenland Ice Sheet Melt Nearing Critical ‘Tipping Point’
    http://www.climatecentral.org/news/greenland-ice-sheet-reflectivity-near-record-low-research-shows/
    Andrew Freedman, Climate Central, 29 June 2012
    The Greenland ice sheet is poised for another record melt this year, and is approaching a “tipping point” into a new and more dangerous melt regime in which the summer melt area covers the entire land mass,  according to new findings from polar researchers.

    AEMO slashes energy demand forecasts by nearly 10 per cent
    http://reneweconomy.com.au/2012/aemo-slashes-energy-demand-forecasts-by-nearly-10-per-cent-56289
    Giles Parkinson, ReNewEconomy, 29 June 2012
    The energy market game-changer, falling demand: Developers and network operators can tear up their business plans. And so can some renewable hopefuls too – the era of solar PV and price-conscious consumers is here.
    AND
    Why residential electricity demand is not growing
    http://www.climatespectator.com.au/commentary/why-residential-electricity-demand-not-growing

    What can our protected places teach us about saving the Arctic?
    http://grist.org/article/what-can-our-protected-places-teach-us-about-saving-the-arctic-3/
    Joe Smyth, Grist, 28 June 2012
    Our national parks have been called “America’s best idea,” and Americans are proud of the special places we have protected for the inspiration and enjoyment of current and future generations. But protected areas from Florida to Alaska face new challenges on a warming planet, and melting sea ice means that a newly vulnerable area – the Arctic – is increasingly threatened by offshore oil drilling and industrial fishing.

    Adapting to climate change: Necessary but difficult and expensive
    http://grist.org/climate-change/adapting-to-climate-change-necessary-but-difficult-and-expensive/
    David Roberts, Grist, 22 June 2012
    So: it’s mitigation, adaptation, and/or suffering. Some of the latter two are unavoidable, but if we care about the health and well-being of our descendents, we’ll maximize the first, starting today.

    AUSTRALIA’S CARBON PRICE COMMENCES

    Climate Spectator Carbon Tax Special
    http://www.climatespectator.com.au/commentary/carbon-tax-special

    Another day, another carbon price beat-up
    http://reneweconomy.com.au/2012/another-day-another-carbon-price-beat-up-19146
    Giles Parkinson, ReNewEconomy, 26 June 2012
    The front page stories in today’s mainstream media about bailouts for Australia’s biggest brown coal generators are not quite what they seem.

    To a morning sunrise of raised expectation and lowered fear
    http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/to-a-morning-sunrise-of-raised-expectation-and-lowered-fear-20120629-21869.html
    Ross Garnaut, SMH, June 30, 2012
    When we wake up tomorrow, Australia will have carbon pricing. How will its effects compare with those expected a year ago, when I produced my Climate Change Review for the Federal Parliament’s multiparty committee?

    Carbon tax a job half done
    http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/politics/carbon-tax-a-job-half-done-20120626-210cr.html
    David Day, The Age, June 27, 2012
    Coal is the great contradiction in government policy on climate change. There are good reasons for slowing and halting coal mining.

    Rich, polluters, miners brace for July 1
    http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-national/rich-polluters-miners-brace-for-july-1-20120629-216ak.html
    Colin Brinsden, AAP/SMH, 29 June 2012
    The well-off, polluters and the mining industry will be the targets of three hard-fought federal tax initiatives due to start from July 1

    Australia’s carbon price
    http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/v2/n7/full/nclimate1607.html
    Frank Jotzo, Nature Climate Change, 17 June 2012
    Australia’s carbon pricing mechanism leads the way with innovative design in price management and revenue recycling but could fall victim to partisan politics.

    Shift minds on a tax? Unlikely
    http://www.nationaltimes.com.au/opinion/politics/shift-minds-on-a-tax-unlikely-20120626-210ct.html
    Ross Gittins, SMH, June 27, 2012
    People who feel carbon tax is terrible will continue to think this way, whatever the reality.

    AFTER RIO20+

    After Rio, we know. Governments have given up on the planet
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/jun/25/rio-governments-will-not-save-planet
    George Monbiot, Guardian, 25 June 2012
    The post-summit pledge was an admission of defeat against consumer capitalism. But we can still salvage the natural world

    End of an era, So now what do we do to defend life on Earth?
    http://www.monbiot.com/2012/06/25/end-of-an-era/
    George Monbiot, Guardian, 25 June 2012
    It is, perhaps, the greatest failure of collective leadership since the first world war. The Earth’s living systems are collapsing, and the leaders of some of the most powerful nations – the US, the UK, Germany, Russia – could not even be bothered to turn up and discuss it. Those who did attend the Earth summit last week solemnly agreed to keep stoking the destructive fires: sixteen times in their text they pledged to pursue “sustained growth”, the primary cause of the biosphere’s losses.

    Rio+20 Draft Text Is 283 Paragraphs Of Fluff
    http://www.countercurrents.org/monbiot240612.htm
    George Monbiot, 24 June, 2012
    In 1992, world leaders signed up to something called “sustainability”. Few of them were clear about what it meant; I suspect that many of them had no idea. Perhaps as a result, it did not take long for this concept to mutate into something subtly different: “sustainable development”. Then it made a short jump to another term: “sustainable growth”. And now, in the 2012 Rio+20 text that world leaders are about to adopt, it has subtly mutated once more: into “sustained growth”

    ENERGY AND INNOVATION

    Coal plants: Filthy, dangerous, and now a terrible investment!
    http://grist.org/climate-energy/the-days-of-cheap-coal-are-over/
    Justin Guay, Grist, 28 June 2012
    Despite what the coal industry would have you believe, the days of affordable coal-fired power are over. That’s the conclusion of the Sierra Club’s recent ”Locked In,” a report that analyzes the wide array of financial risks coal plant investments face.

    AEMO: Electricity prices depressed for years
    http://www.climatespectator.com.au/commentary/aemo-electricity-prices-depressed-years
    Tristan Edis, Climate Spectator, 29 June 2012
    AEMO has massively downgraded its forecasts of electricity demand, which suggest consumers will win, but coal power stations will be badly squeezed through carbon costs combined with depressed prices caused by renewables and energy efficiency.

    How to power a continent with wind and solar
    http://reneweconomy.com.au/2012/how-to-power-a-continent-with-wind-and-solar-97566
    Giles Parkinson, ReNew Economy, 27 June 2012
    Of all the most ambitious renewable energy projects around the world, the European Desertec Industrial Initiative ranks right at the top – some would say it’s fantastic in both the true and the modern sense of the word.

    Victoria’s Brown Coal Boondoggle
    http://newmatilda.com/2012/06/28/hrls-brown-coal-boondoggle
    Julien Vincent, New Matilda, 28 June 2012
    Looking for signs of the Carbon Tax apocalypse? How about taxpayer dollars being used to both shut down and keep open the same brown coal power station? Julien Vincent on the latest in the HRL saga

    “Millenium Challenge 13: Smart energy demand and renewable supply”
    http://theconversation.edu.au/challenge-13-smart-energy-demand-and-renewable-supply-6994
    Mark Diesendorf, The Conversation, 26 June 2013
    In part 13 of our multi-disciplinary Millennium Project series, Mark Diesendorf argues that it is high time we got smart about power: how we generate it and how we deliver it.

    NSW announces end to CSG ‘royalty holiday’
    http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-06-24/nsw-ends-coal-mining-royalty-holiday/4088706
    ABC News, 24 June 2012
    The New South Wales Government will end its so-called “royalty holiday” for CSG miners and start collecting royalties from day one of production.

    Solar Insights: How to build utility-scale solar with no subsidies
    http://reneweconomy.com.au/2012/solar-insights-how-to-build-utility-scale-solar-with-no-subsidies-23773
    Giles Parkinson, ReNew Economy,  25 June 2012
    German firm Solaria has released more details about how it plans to build a subsidy-free, 60MW solar PV facility in Spain – one of the first of almost 1800MW of such projects in a country that cut all subsidies earlier this year.

    How we can pursue 100% renewables
    http://www.climatespectator.com.au/commentary/how-we-can-pursue-100-renewables
    Mark Diesendorf, The Conversation, 26 Jun 2012
    In part 13 of the multi-disciplinary Millennium Project series, Mark Diesendorf argues that it is high time we got smart about power: how we generate it and how we deliver it.

    Game Over: Hoffert On Unconventional Gas & Oil And Unconventional Self-Destruction Of Civilization
    http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2012/06/28/508563/game-over-hoffert-on-unconventional-gas-oil-and-unconventional-self-destruction-of-civilization/
    Joe Romm, Climate Progress, June 28, 2012
    Can we preserve a livable climate if we exploit any significant fraction of unconventional oil & gas resources? The CEO of ExxonMobil, which has been a major funder of climate disinformers, says it will be “manageable” through adaptation.  Actual climate scientists disagree, as does the recent scientific literature.

    POLITICS AND POLICY

    Exxon CEO Thinks You’re All Overreacting to Climate Change
    http://www.motherjones.com/blue-marble/2012/06/rex-tillerson-thinks-youre-all-overreacting-climate-change
    Kate Sheppard, Mother Jones, 28 June 2012
    ExxonMobil has never been a big fan of climate science. The largest oil company in the world has been caught funding bad science on climate, and CEO Rex Tillerson has claimed previously that there are “too many complexities around climate science for anybody to fully understand all of the causes and effects.”

    What The World’s Richest Woman Gina Rinehart Thinks About Climate Change
    http://www.desmogblog.com/what-world-s-richest-woman-gina-rinehart-thinks-about-climate-change
    Graham Readfearn, DeSmogBlog, 27 June 2012
    She is the richest woman on the planet with a personal fortune approaching $30 billion thanks to her coal and iron ore businesses.

    Future of polluting power stations remains unclear
    http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-06-29/future-of-polluting-power-stations-remains-unclear/4101192
    ABCNews, 29 June 2012
    The future of two of Victoria’s biggest power plants continues to hang in the balance.

    Libs to take axe to climate agencies
    http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/climate/libs-to-take-axe-to-climate-agencies/story-e6frg6xf-1226407087085
    Sid Maher, The Australian, June 25, 2012
    The  opposition has unveiled plans to scrap at least five major climate change agencies and dozens of programs as part of its removal of the carbon tax if Tony Abbott wins the next election.

    Palace protest arrests
    http://www.smh.com.au/world/palace-protest-arrests-20120624-20wco.html
    SMH, June 25, 2012
    Four climate change activists have been arrested after scaling the gates of Buckingham Palace and chaining themselves to the railings. Three men and one woman who said they represented the Climate Siren group locked themselves to the centre gate and south centre gate, wearing T-shirts bearing the words ”climate emergency. 10% annual emission cuts,” and wielding megaphones.

    SCIENCE AND IMPACTS

    Cities as Hot as Death Valley
    http://www.weather.com/news/weather-forecast/plains-hotter-death-valley-20120627
    Jon Erdman, weather.com, Jun 28, 2012
    You may have heard of Death Valley, Calif.  This is typically the nation’s hottest location in the spring and early summer.  The valley’s  “Badwater Basin” sits 282 feet below sea-level, the lowest elevation in the U.S.  That lack of elevation and its location in the Desert Southwest allows it to heat into the 120s at least several times each summer.

    Global carbon emissions rise is far bigger than previous estimates
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/jun/21/global-carbon-emissions-record
    Simon Rogers and Fiona Harvey, Guardian, 21 June 2012
    New analysis by the Guardian shows the world emitted a record 31.8bn tonnes of carbon from energy consumption in 2010

    Gleckler et al Confirm the Human Fingerprint in Global Ocean Warming
    http://skepticalscience.com/gleckler-human-fingerprint-ocean-warming.html
    Dana Nuccitelli, Skeptical Science, 27 June 2012
    Although over 90% of overall global warming goes into heating the oceans, it is often overlooked, particularly by those who try to deny that global warming is still happening.  Nature Climate Change has a new paper by some big names in the field of oceanography, including Domingues, Church, Ishii, and also Santer (Gleckler et al. 2012).

    Arctic find could cause major shift in climate debate
    http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/arctic-find-could-cause-major-shift-in-climate-debate-20120624-20w6t.html
    Michael Richardson, SMH, June 25, 2012
    Two years ago, a Canadian research team alarmed climate scientists when it published the results of a survey of the oceans. The researchers reported that the world’s phytoplankton – tiny, plant-like organisms that grow in seawater – seemed to have been disappearing at a rate of about 1 per cent a year for the past century.

    Arctic ice turns to the dark side
    http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/v2/n7/full/nclimate1603.html
    Nicola Jones, Nature Climate Change, 26 June 2012
    Subject terms:
    It is well known that the minimum summer Arctic sea-ice cover has shrunk by about a third since 1979, at an average rate of more than 10% per decade. Less well appreciated is the fact that the proportion of thick, old ice that lasts from one year to the next is shrinking even faster, at about 15% per decade

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  • After Rio, we know. Governments have given up on the planet (MONBIOT)

    After Rio, we know. Governments have given up on the planet (MONBIOT)

    The post-summit pledge was an admission of defeat against consumer capitalism. But we can still salvage the natural world

    Wildflower meadow in Cheshire

    Our children must ‘experience something of the delight in the natural world and of the peaceful, unharried lives with which we have been blessed’. Photo: Alan Novelli/Alamy

    It is, perhaps, the greatest failure of collective leadership since the first world war. The Earth’s living systems are collapsing, and the leaders of some of the most powerful nations – the United States, the UK, Germany, Russia – could not even be bothered to turn up and discuss it. Those who did attend the Earth summit in Rio last week solemnly agreed to keep stoking the destructive fires: sixteen times in their text they pledged to pursue “sustained growth“, the primary cause of the biosphere’s losses.

    The efforts of governments are concentrated not on defending the living Earth from destruction, but on defending the machine that is destroying it. Whenever consumer capitalism becomes snarled up by its own contradictions, governments scramble to mend the machine, to ensure – though it consumes the conditions that sustain our lives – that it runs faster than ever before.

    The thought that it might be the wrong machine, pursuing the wrong task, cannot even be voiced in mainstream politics. The machine greatly enriches the economic elite, while insulating the political elite from the mass movements it might otherwise confront. We have our bread; now we are wandering, in spellbound reverie, among the circuses.

    We have used our unprecedented freedoms – secured at such cost by our forebears – not to agitate for justice, for redistribution, for the defence of our common interests, but to pursue the dopamine hits triggered by the purchase of products we do not need. The world’s most inventive minds are deployed not to improve the lot of humankind but to devise ever more effective means of stimulation, to counteract the diminishing satisfactions of consumption. The mutual dependencies of consumer capitalism ensure that we all unwittingly conspire in the trashing of what may be the only living planet. The failure at Rio de Janeiro belongs to us all.

    It marks, more or less, the end of the multilateral effort to protect the biosphere. The only successful global instrument – the Montreal Protocol on substances that deplete the ozone layer – was agreed and implemented years before the first Earth Summit in 1992. It was one of the last fruits of a different political era, in which intervention in the market for the sake of the greater good was not considered anathema, even by the Thatcher and Reagan governments. Everything of value discussed since then has led to weak, unenforceable agreements, or to no agreements at all.

    This is not to suggest that the global system and its increasingly pointless annual meetings will disappear, or even change. The governments which allowed the Earth Summit and all such meetings to fail evince no sense of responsibility for this outcome, and appear untroubled by the thought that if a system hasn’t worked for 20 years, there’s something wrong with the system. They walk away, aware that there are no political penalties; that the media is as absorbed with consumerist trivia as the rest of us; that, when future generations have to struggle with the mess they have left behind, their contribution will have been forgotten. (And then they lecture the rest of us on responsibility.)

    Nor is it to suggest that multilateralism should be abandoned. Agreements on biodiversity, the oceans and the trade in endangered species may achieve some marginal mitigation of the full-spectrum assault on the biosphere that the consumption machine has unleashed. But that’s about it.

    The action – if action there is – will mostly be elsewhere. Those governments which retain an interest in planet Earth will have to work alone, or in agreement with like-minded nations. There will be no means of restraining free riders, no means of persuading voters that their actions will be matched by those of other countries.

    That we have missed the chance of preventing two degrees of global warming now seems obvious. That most of the other planetary boundaries will be crossed, equally so. So what do we do now?

    Some people will respond by giving up, or at least withdrawing from political action. Why, they will ask, should we bother, if the inevitable destination is the loss of so much of what we hold dear: the forests, the brooks, the wetlands, the coral reefs, the sea ice, the glaciers, the birdsong and the night chorus, the soft and steady climate which has treated us kindly for so long? It seems to me that there are at least three reasons.

    The first is to draw out the losses over as long a period as possible, in order to allow our children and grandchildren to experience something of the wonder and delight in the natural world and of the peaceful, unharried lives with which we have been blessed. Is that not a worthy aim, even if there were no other?

    The second is to preserve what we can in the hope that conditions might change. I do not believe that the planet-eating machine, maintained by an army of mechanics, oiled by constant injections of public money, will collapse before the living systems on which it feeds. But I might be wrong. Would it not be a terrible waste to allow the tiger, the rhinoceros, the bluefin tuna, the queen’s executioner beetle and the scabious cuckoo bee, the hotlips fungus and the fountain anenome to disappear without a fight if this period of intense exploitation turns out to be a brief one?

    The third is that, while we may have no influence over decisions made elsewhere, there is plenty that can be done within our own borders. Rewilding – the mass restoration of ecosystems – offers the best hope we have of creating refuges for the natural world, which is why I’ve decided to spend much of the next few years promoting it here and abroad.

    Giving up on global agreements or, more accurately, on the prospect that they will substantially alter our relationship with the natural world, is almost a relief. It means walking away from decades of anger and frustration. It means turning away from a place in which we have no agency to one in which we have, at least, a chance of being heard. But it also invokes a great sadness, as it means giving up on so much else.

    Was it too much to have asked of the world’s governments, which performed such miracles in developing stealth bombers and drone warfare, global markets and trillion-dollar bailouts, that they might spend a tenth of the energy and resources they devoted to these projects on defending our living planet? It seems, sadly, that it was.

    Twitter: @georgemonbiot

  • US wildfires are what global warming really looks like, scientists warn

    US wildfires are what global warming really looks like, scientists warn

    The Colorado fires are being driven by extreme temperatures, which are consistent with IPCC projections

    Colorado Springs wildfire

    Homes are destroyed by the Waldo Canyon fire in the Mountain Shadows area of Colorado Springs. Scientists say the fires offer a preview into the kind of disaters that climate change could bring. Photograph: Jerilee Bennett/AP

    Scorching heat, high winds and bone-dry conditions are fueling catastrophic wildfires in the US west that offer a preview of the kind of disasters that human-caused climate change could bring, a trio of scientists said on Thursday.

    “What we’re seeing is a window into what global warming really looks like,” said Princeton University’s Michael Oppenheimer, a lead author for the UN’s climate science panel. “It looks like heat, it looks like fires, it looks like this kind of environmental disaster … This provides vivid images of what we can expect to see more of in the future.”

    In Colorado, wildfires that have raged for weeks have killed four people, displaced thousands and destroyed hundreds of homes. Because winter snowpack was lighter than usual and melted sooner, fire season started earlier in the US west, with wildfires out of control in Colorado, Montana and Utah.

    The high temperatures that are helping drive these fires are consistent with projections by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which said this kind of extreme heat, with little cooling overnight, is one kind of damaging impact of global warming.

    Others include more severe storms, floods and droughts, Oppenheimer said.

    The stage was set for these fires when winter snowpack was lighter than usual, said Steven Running, a forest ecologist at the University of Montana.

    Mountain snows melted an average of two weeks earlier than normal this year, Running said. “That just sets us up for a longer, drier summer. Then all you need is an ignition source and wind.”

    Warmer-than-usual winters also allow tree-killing mountain pine beetles to survive the winter and attack western forests, leaving behind dry wood to fuel wildfires earlier in the season, Running said.

    “Now we have a lot of dead trees to burn … it’s not even July yet,” he said. Trying to stop such blazes driven by high winds is a bit like to trying to stop a hurricane, Running said.

    Fires cost about $1bn or more a year, and exact a toll on human health, ranging from increased risk of heart, lung and kidney ailments to post-traumatic stress disorder, said Howard Frumkin, a public health expert at the University of Washington.

    “Wildfire smoke is like intense air pollution,” Frumkin said. “Pollution levels can reach many times higher than a bad day in Mexico City or Beijing.”

    Older people, the very young and the ill are most vulnerable to the heat that adds to wildfire risk, he said. The strain of fleeing homes and living in communities in the path of a wildfire can trigger ailments like post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and anxiety.

    The briefing was convened by the science organisation Climate Communications, with logistical support by Climate Nexus, an advocacy and communications group. An accompanying report on heat waves and climate change was released simultaneously.