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The emerging human fingerprint on global extreme fire weather
Climate change
Published 11 Mar 2026
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
15-03-2026 to 15-03-2027
Available on-demand until 15th March 2027
Cost
Free
Education type
Publication
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Extreme fire weather (hot, dry, and windy conditions) has intensified globally, yet formally attributing this trend to anthropogenic climate change remains challenging. Here, we analyze global trends in extreme fire weather days (FWI95d, annual count of days with Fire Weather Index above the 95th percentile) over 1980–2023, using climate model ensembles, observational data, and fingerprint detection techniques. We find that the observed increase in extreme fire weather bears a clear externally forced signal, detectable at 99% confidence above natural variability and attributable to human-induced climate change. This emerging human-induced fingerprint on extreme fire weather highlights a benchmark for climate science and underscores the urgency of integrating these insights into wildfire risk management and adaptation strategies.
Contact details
Email address

1200 New York Avenue NW
Washington DC