Fire risks rise in previously too-wet-to-burn US Northwest
Source: Associated Press
Fire risks rise in previously too-wet-to-burn US Northwest
By TOM JAMES
August 5, 2019
ISSAQUAH, Wash. (AP) Nestled in the foothills of Washingtons Cascade Mountains, the bustling Seattle suburb of Issaquah seems an unlikely candidate for anxiety over wildfires.
The region, famous for its rainfall, has long escaped major burns even as global warming has driven an increase in the size and number of wildfires elsewhere in the American West.
But according to experts, previously too-wet-to-burn parts of the Pacific Northwest face an increasing risk of significant wildfires due to changes in its climate driven by the same phenomenon: Global warming is bringing higher temperatures, lower humidity and longer stretches of drought.
And the region is uniquely exposed to the threat, with property owners who are often less prepared for fire than those in drier places and more homes tucked along forests than any other western state.
In Issaquah and towns like it across the region, that takes a shape familiar from recent destructive California wildfires: heavy vegetation that spills into backyards, often pressing against houses in neighborhoods built along mountains, with strong seasonal winds and few roads leading out.
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Read more: https://apnews.com/fdf0928b4c80420b8e049ce80dfff51b