Climate change made fire conditions twice as likely in South Korea blazes: Study
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Vast swathes of the country’s south-east were burned in a series of blazes in March, which killed 31 people and destroyed historic sites.
PHOTO: AFP
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SEOUL - Human-induced climate change made the ultra-dry and warm conditions that fanned South Korea’s deadliest wildfires in history
Vast swathes of the country’s south-east were burned in a series of blazes in March, which killed 31 people and destroyed historic sites, including a roughly thousand-year-old temple site
The affected area had been experiencing below-average rainfall for months and was then hit by strong winds, local officials said, following South Korea’s hottest year on record in 2024.
The hot, dry and windy conditions that fed the flames were “twice as likely and about 15 per cent more intense” due to human-caused climate change, said World Weather Attribution (WWA), a scientific network that studies the influence of global warming on extreme weather.
“South Korea’s deadliest wildfires were made much more likely by climate change,” said Dr Clair Barnes, a WWA researcher at the Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College London.
Officials said at the time that the conditions made it very hard for conventional firefighting methods to control the blazes, which leapt from pine tree to pine tree across dried-out hillsides.
“These unprecedented conditions exposed the limits of even well-developed suppression systems,” WWA said in a report on its findings.
“With fires increasingly likely to exceed control capacity, the emphasis must shift towards proactive risk reduction,” it added.
More than 62 per cent of South Korea is covered in forest, the report said, with dense tree cover especially prominent along the eastern coast and in mountainous regions – landscapes that significantly influence how wildfires spread.
Around 11 per cent of South Korea’s forested areas border human settlements, the study said.
“These areas are particularly susceptible to ignition and have accounted for nearly 30 per cent of wildfires recorded between 2016 and 2022.”
The researchers’ findings were most conclusive regarding the increased likelihood of fire weather – which is measured by the Hot-Dry-Windy Index (HDWI) – and higher maximum temperatures.
But they found no attributable link between climate change and rainfall levels during the period surrounding the fires.
Fires rage
Officials said at the time that the conditions made it very hard for conventional firefighting methods to control the blazes.
PHOTO: REUTERS
South Korea has few energy resources of its own and relies on imported coal – a cheap but dirty fuel – for around a third of the electricity powering the country, according to figures from the International Energy Agency.
The inferno in March also laid bare the country’s demographic crisis and regional disparities, as rural areas are both underpopulated and disproportionately home to senior citizens.
Many of the dead were seniors, and experts have warned that it will be hard for people to rebuild their lives in the burn zone.
In the weeks and months since, South Korea has recorded a string of wildfires.
In April, helicopters were deployed to contain a wildfire
This week, more than 2,000 people were forced to evacuate after wildfires occurred in parts of the south-eastern city of Daegu, after a blaze broke out on Mount Hamji in the region.
WWA is a pioneer in attribution science, which uses peer-reviewed methods to quickly assess the possible influence of climate change on extreme weather events.
This allows a comparison of observations from today’s climate, with some 1.3 deg C of warming, against computer simulations that consider the climate before humanity started burning fossil fuels in the 1800s. AFP

