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As wildfires scorch the earth, the Arctic biome rejects more carbon

Context : Global Wildfire Crisis & Carbon Emissions

  • Escalation of Wildfires Globally:
    • Severe wildfires in 2025 in California (Eaton & Palisades), Texas, Oklahoma, and Japan caused massive destruction: over 14,000 structures destroyed, thousands evacuated, and dozens of lives lost.
    • The Eaton Fire alone burned over 16,000 hectares; the Japan fire (near Ofunato City) affected nearly 2,900 hectares, the worst in five decades.

Relevance : GS 3(Disaster Management , Environment and Ecology)

  • Wildfire Emissions Data:
    • In January 2025 alone, wildfires emitted 800,000 tonnes of carbon4x higher than the same period a decade ago (CAMS data).
    • Wildfires’ radiative power (heat emission) exceeded the 2003–2024 average by an order of magnitude — indicating intensifying heat signatures.

Arctic Boreal Zone (ABZ): From Carbon Sink to Carbon Source

  • ABZ’s Traditional Role:
    • Comprises tundra, permafrost, wetlands, and boreal forests.
    • Acts as a major carbon sink, historically storing vast carbon in frozen soils and vegetation.
  • Transition to Carbon Source:
    • third of ABZ now emits more carbon than it absorbs.
    • Shift began before 1990, accelerated by wildfires in Eastern Siberia (2003) and Timmins, Canada (2012).
  • Study Insights (Nature Climate Change):
    • Analysis from 200 monitoring sites (1990–2020): shows net carbon emission from many Arctic regions.
    • Alaska (44%)Northern Europe (25%), and Siberia (13%) were key carbon-emitting regions.
  • Non-Summer Emissions > Summer Uptake:
    • Emissions during non-summer months (Sep–May) now exceed summer (Jun–Aug) carbon absorption.
    • Sign of long-term seasonal imbalances in carbon sequestration.

Feedback Loop: Warming–Wildfire–Carbon Emissions

  • Permafrost Thawing:
    • Rising Arctic temperatures accelerate permafrost melt, leading to organic decay and CO₂ release.
    • Changes in plant types, drier soils, and higher topsoil temperatures worsen the release.
  • Vicious Cycle:
    • Wildfires release carbon → Carbon worsens global warming → Warming dries land, increases fire risk → More wildfires.
    • Creates a self-reinforcing feedback loop with potential tipping points for climate systems.

India’s Forest Fires & Carbon Emissions

  • Fire-Prone States:
    • As per India State of Forest Report (Dec 2024), Uttarakhand, Odisha, and Chhattisgarh topped forest fire incidents.
    • Uttarakhand alone saw 5,315 fires between Nov 2022 and June 2023.
  • Hotspot Trends:
    • Fire hotspot counts declining slightly:
      • 2.23 lakh (2021–22) → 2.03 lakh (2023–24).
  • Temperature Rise:
    • IIT-KGP & IITM, Pune: Land temperatures rising:
      • 0.1º–0.3ºC/decade (pre-monsoon);
      • 0.2º–0.4ºC/decade (post-monsoon).
  • Heatwaves = Fire Risk:
    • Earlier, slower-moving, longer-lasting heatwaves are amplifying fire vulnerability.
    • India emits ~69 million tonnes of CO/year from forest fires (Chase India).

Broader Environmental & Policy Implications

  • Loss of Carbon Sink Services:
    • ABZ’s shift erodes a key natural buffer against global emissions.
    • Increases dependence on anthropogenic emission cuts and carbon capture technologies.
  • Climate Justice Concerns:
    • Countries with minimal historical emissions, like India, face climate risks from emissions elsewhere.
    • Highlights the need for global climate financeadaptation funds, and early-warning systems.
  • Policy Responses Needed:
    • Better forest management, fire prevention, and community-based resilience programs.
    • In Arctic and elsewhere, international cooperation vital to protect shared global commons.

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