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    AB5 which credible scientific organizations are saying that climate change is having or will have no impact on wildfires?

    We are still waiting.

    In your own province of Alberta the graphs show the area is clearly increasing.

    And comparing area burned over the last century does not take in to account the improvement and implementation of fire fighting resources and suppression.

    Your graphs need to be put into context by experts who can explain them.
    Last edited by chuckChuck; Jun 8, 2023, 06:05.

    Comment


      Bullsht Chuck. Its arson. How is it possible all the wildfires started in Quebec at the exact same time?https://vm.tiktok.com/ZM2r9kqkX/


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      Comment


        I see the flat earthers believe its all arson?

        I am glad you are here BL to help your buddy AB5 clear up some of the science around climate change and the real cause of forest fires. LOL
        Last edited by chuckChuck; Jun 8, 2023, 06:19.

        Comment


          Answer the question how do 15+ fires start simultaneously in Quebec forests? https://twitter.com/Morpho181/status...91307446272003

          Comment


            I always have one question when it comes to Climate Change. I don’t really ever see people denying climate change exists, frequently you’ll instead see “the climate is always changing”.

            So:

            Do you feel humans enhance/impact climate change?




            If someone doesn’t feel humans are impacting climate change, then you’re going to argue until you’re blue in the face Chuck. I picture you blue quite often actually.
            Last edited by Blaithin; Jun 8, 2023, 09:17.

            Comment


              Alberta has been quietly tallying up hundreds of counts of arson in the past week, some with a single person setting dozens of fires. Crickets from the MSM.

              Next time chuck, tell your antifa buddies to try setting the polling stations on fire if they want to influence an election. Rural folk are too smart for you.

              Comment


                Where’s the burden of proof when someone throws a lit cigarette out the car window?

                Comment


                  Originally posted by sumdumguy View Post
                  Where’s the burden of proof when someone throws a lit cigarette out the car window?
                  No ash trays in vehicles for many years.
                  What do you do?

                  Got to be PC.
                  Last edited by shtferbrains; Jun 8, 2023, 19:41.

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by shtferbrains View Post
                    No ash trays in vehicles for many years.
                    What do you do?

                    Got to be PC.

                    One way to prove its climate change? We’re burning up. 🙀

                    Comment


                      https://cfs.nrcan.gc.ca/publications?id=39501

                      Fire-regime changes in Canada over the last half century. 2019. Hanes, C.C.; Wang, X.; Jain, P.; Parisien, M.-P.; Little, J.M.; Flannigan, M.D. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 49: 256-269.

                      Year: 2019

                      Contemporary fire regimes of Canadian forests have been well documented based on forest fire records between the late 1950s to 1990s. Due to known limitations of fire datasets, an analysis of changes in fire-regime characteristics could not be easily undertaken. This paper presents fire regime trends nationally and within two zonation systems, the homogeneous fire regime zones and ecozones, for two time periods: 1959-2015 and 1980-2015. Nationally, trends in both area burned and number of large fires (≥ 200 ha) have increased significantly since 1959, which might be due to increases in lightning-caused fires. Human-caused fires, in contrast, have shown a decline. Results suggest that large fires have been getting larger over the last 57 years, and that the fire season has been starting approximately one week earlier and ending one week later. At the regional level, trends in fire regimes are variable across the country, with fewer significant trends. Area burned, number of large fires, and lightning-caused fires are increasing in most of western Canada, whereas human-caused fires are either stable or declining throughout the country. Overall, Canadian forests appear to be engaged in a trajectory towards more active fire regimes over the last half century.

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