気候変動と山火事の関連を定量化(The Smoky Signature of Climate Change)

2025-12-15 ハーバード大学

ハーバード大学ジョン・A・ポールソン工学・応用科学部の研究チームは、気候変動が米国西部の森林火災と大気汚染(煙霧・PM2.5)に与えた影響を定量的に評価した研究を発表した。過去30年(1997〜2020年)の火災焼失面積の約65%が、人為的な気候変動による気温上昇と乾燥化に起因すると推定された。また、同期間に観測された最も危険な微小粒子状物質(PM2.5)の約半分が気候変動に直接結び付くことが示された。この結果は、温暖化が単なる背景要因ではなく、火災頻度・強度の増加と煙による大気汚染を顕著に悪化させる主要ドライバーであることを意味する。研究では観測データ、大規模気候モデル、化学輸送モデル(GEOS-Chem)を統合して分析を行い、気候変動が西部米国住民の煙曝露に与える影響を明らかにした。また、対策として計画的な焼き払いなど陸域管理戦略の重要性も強調された。

<関連情報>

1992年から2020年にかけて米国西部全域の煙濃度を押し上げた人為的気候変動の大きな役割 Large role of anthropogenic climate change in driving smoke concentrations across the western United States from 1992 to 2020

Xu Feng, Loretta J. Mickley, Jed O. Kaplan, Makoto Kelp, Yang Li, and Tianjia Liu
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  Published:December 2, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2421903122

気候変動と山火事の関連を定量化(The Smoky Signature of Climate Change)

Significance

Wildfire activity has increased dramatically in the western United States over the last three decades, leading to a significant impact on air quality and human health. This study highlights the substantial role of anthropogenic climate change (ACC) in driving these wildfires and the subsequent smoke concentrations in the western United States. Our results suggest that ACC contributes 33 to 82% to observed burned area in the western United States from 1992 to 2020. Such climate change also accounts for nearly half of surface smoke PM2.5 concentrations from 1997 to 2020 and explains 58% of the increasing smoke trend from 2010 to 2020. Our study calls attention to the threat that wildfires have on smoke concentrations and human health under a changing climate regime.

Abstract

Wildfire activity has increased dramatically in the western United States over the last three decades, having a significant impact on air quality and human health. However, quantifying the drivers of trends in wildfires and subsequent smoke concentrations is challenging, as both natural variability (NV) and anthropogenic climate change (ACC) play important roles. Here, we devise an approach involving observed meteorology and vegetation and a range of models to determine the relative roles of ACC and NV in driving burned area across the western United States. We also examine the influence of ACC on smoke concentrations. We estimate that ACC accounts for 33 to 82% of observed total burned area, depending on the ecoregion, yielding 65% of total fire emissions on average across the western United States from 1992 to 2020. In all ecoregions except Mediterranean California, ACC contributes to a greater percentage of burned area in lightning-ignited wildfires than in human-ignited wildfires. On average, ACC contributes 49% to smoke PM2.5 concentrations in the western United States from 1997 to 2020, and explains 58% of the increasing trend in smoke PM2.5 from 2010 to 2020. Northern California and areas in Oregon, Washington, and Idaho experience the greatest smoke concentrations attributable to ACC, averaging 40 to 66% of total PM2.5 over 2010–2020. Our work highlights the significant role of ACC in degrading air quality in the western United States and identifies those regions most vulnerable to wildfire smoke and thus adverse health impacts.

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