Climate conditions will continue to increase wildfire risks in in the Northwest by the end of the century.
Although wildfires are a natural part of most Northwest forest ecosystems, warmer and drier conditions have helped increase the number and extent of wildfires in western U.S. forests since the 1970s. Warmer winters have led to reductions in the mountain snowpack that historically blanketed the region’s mountains, increasing wildfire risk. The warming trend is projected to be accentuated in certain mountain areas in late winter and spring, further exacerbating snowpack loss and increasing the risk for wildfires.