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Forest fires in Sweden

Forest fires in Sweden

Sweden has a lot of forest and woodland.   In fact, roughly half of the country is covered by trees.  Travelling back some two thousand years, the trees were mainly broadleaved but then oaks and alders began to decline.  However, by the mid twentieth century Spruces and Pines were dominant.  This was mainly due to the process of forestry management, producing wood for fuel, charcoal [used in iron smelting], potash, tar and timber for building.

However, the recent record breaking temperatures and drought across many parts of Europe have put large areas of Swedish forest at risk.   Rainfall in Sweden this year has been dramatically down - approximately a seventh of the normal amount. One has to look back to the C19th century to find similarly low figures. 

As a result of the high temperatures and reduced rainfall, river flows are dramatically reduced, silage / grass production is down so cattle farming is affected. People have been advised to stay inside and close the windows - to avoid breathing smoky air from the fires.  In some areas,  villages have been evacuated.  In Uppsala (north of Stockholm) temperatures have reached 33oC.   Indeed, even forest that lies within the Arctic Circle has ignited.

As of Sunday  (22nd July), there were some 53 fires burning on Sunday from the extreme north down to Malmo in the south.  Italy, Germany, Poland and France have sent help - including firefighting aircraft .  These planes can scoop up more than 6,000 litres of water from a nearby water source (Sweden has lots of lakes), and drop it on a fire without having to return to 'base' to refill its tanks.    The fires have affected some 20,000 hectares and destroyed woodlands valued at [circa] £50 million.

Areas in Denmark,  Norway and  Finland are also experiencing high temperatures and dry weather which, seems unlikely to end soon.


Featured image thanks to Ylvers on Pixabay


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Discussion

Our politics are concerned with Brexit, with Covid-19, with re-electing Trump or not, with trade deals. Meanwhile half the planet’s forests are on fire, ice caps are melting and thousands of species face extinction. And when things like Covid-19 happen, all our good intentions towards the environment are overturned. Veggies at the supermarket back in plastic, any project approved for jobs, regardless of environmental impact. We need to keep on track towards fighting climate change. Otherwise, we’re all screwed.

Jos

24 September, 2020