Saturday, 2 May 2026
Las Vegas News
  • About Us
  • Our Authors
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • News
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Las Vegas
  • Las
  • Vegas
  • news
  • Trump
  • crime
  • entertainment
  • politics
  • Nevada
  • man
Las Vegas NewsLas Vegas News
Font ResizerAa
  • About Us
  • Our Authors
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Search
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
News

Climate Change Fuels Round-the-Clock Wildfires Across North America

By Matthias Binder April 30, 2026
Wildfires used to ‘go to sleep’ at night. Climate change has them burning overtime
Wildfires used to ‘go to sleep’ at night. Climate change has them burning overtime (Featured Image)
SHARE

Wildfires used to ‘go to sleep’ at night. Climate change has them burning overtime

Contents
From Nighttime Pauses to Persistent FlamesNotable Nighttime Fire SurgesWarming Nights Drive the ChangeFirefighting in the DarkA Sobering Outlook for Fire-Prone Lands

From Nighttime Pauses to Persistent Flames (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Washington — North American wildfires now burn later into the night and ignite earlier each morning, as human-driven climate change prolongs the hot, dry conditions that sustain flames. A recent study revealed that potential burning hours have surged 36% over the past 50 years, transforming what were once reliable nighttime lulls into extended periods of fire risk. This shift, detailed in Science Advances, underscores how warmer nights are rewriting the rules of wildfire behavior across the United States and Canada.

From Nighttime Pauses to Persistent Flames

Historically, wildfires diminished or extinguished at night when cooler temperatures and rising humidity quenched their intensity. Researchers found this pattern has eroded significantly. In regions like California, potential fire-favorable hours have increased by 550 annually since the mid-1970s. Southwestern New Mexico and central Arizona show even steeper rises, up to 2,000 additional hours per year.

- Advertisement -

The study examined weather conditions ripe for fire spread, though actual blazes did not ignite during every such window. Authors analyzed atmospheric factors including temperature, humidity, wind, and fuel moisture. They applied a model built from nearly 9,000 large fires between 2017 and 2023 to historical data stretching back to 1975 and projected forward to 2106. Fire-prone days have also grown by 44%, adding roughly 26 days to the annual calendar.

Notable Nighttime Fire Surges

Several high-profile blazes illustrate the dangers of overnight activity. The 2023 Lahaina fire in Maui sparked at 12:22 a.m., while 2024’s Jasper fire in Alberta and 2025 Los Angeles fires raged through the darkness. These events highlight how flames that persist past sunset gain momentum by dawn, complicating containment efforts.

“Fires normally slow down during the night, or they just stop,” said Xianli Wang, a fire scientist with the Canadian Forest Service and study co-author. “But under extreme fire hazard conditions, fire actually burns through the night or later into the night.” Such behavior stems primarily from warmer, drier nights accompanied by occasional gusts.

Warming Nights Drive the Change

Nighttime temperatures have risen faster than daytime highs, a trend linked to heat-trapping gases from fossil fuels. Increased cloud cover traps warmth near the surface, acting like a blanket. Since 1975, summer nighttime lows in the contiguous U.S. climbed 2.6 degrees Fahrenheit, outpacing daytime highs by 0.4 degrees, per National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration data.

Humidity fails to recover as it once did, leaving vegetation parched. Droughts exacerbate this, creating a feedback loop where dry air draws even more moisture from fuels. “Humidity at night doesn’t rebound from its daytime dryness like it used to,” noted lead author Kaiwei Luo of the University of Alberta. Plants endure prolonged stress, delaying moisture recovery in dead fuels for weeks and heightening flammability.

- Advertisement -

Firefighting in the Dark

Overnight fires demand round-the-clock responses, stripping crews of crucial recovery time. John Abatzoglou, a fire scientist at the University of California, Merced, observed that nights no longer provide “more reliable breaks for wildfire.” Persistent flames build speed for the following day, overwhelming suppression tactics.

Wildland firefighter Nicholai Allen, who develops home fire prevention tools, described the hazards: reduced visibility amplifies risks from wildlife like bears and snakes, which flee flames more aggressively after dark. From 2016 to 2025, U.S. wildfires scorched an average 11,000 square miles yearly—2.6 times the 1980s average. Canada saw similar escalation, with recent burns 2.8 times larger.

  • California: +550 fire-prone hours/year
  • Southwest New Mexico/Arizona: +2,000 hours/year
  • North America overall: +36% burning hours; +44% fire-prone days

A Sobering Outlook for Fire-Prone Lands

The research signals escalating fire potential throughout North America’s vulnerable ecosystems. Syracuse University fire scientist Jacob Bendix, unaffiliated with the study, described it as a “sobering reminder of climate change’s role.” As nights warm further, forests face unrelenting pressure, with drier fuels and extended exposure amplifying risks.

- Advertisement -

Wang warned that the atmosphere’s ongoing warming points to worsening trends. Fire managers must adapt to this new reality, where traditional downtime vanishes and blazes demand unceasing vigilance. The stakes grow higher as burn areas expand, testing response capacities across borders.

Previous Article Bizee vs. LegalZoom: Which Is Right for Your Business? Bizee vs. LegalZoom: Affordable Formation or Comprehensive Legal Support?
Next Article Gas Prices May Soon Average $4.50 per Gallon, One Analyst Predicts U.S. Gas Prices Surge to $4.23 Average, $4.50 Threshold in Sight
Advertisement
Spirit Airlines ceases operations, impacting Las Vegas travelers
Spirit Airlines Halts All Flights: Practical Guidance for Las Vegas Travelers
News
Spirit Airlines shuts down after failing to secure government bailout
Spirit Airlines Shuts Down Overnight After Bailout Fails – Las Vegas Travelers Face Rebooking Rush
News
What will a Spirit Airlines shutdown mean for travelers?
Spirit Airlines Grounds Operations: Urgent Guidance for Las Vegas Travelers on Refunds and Alternatives
News
The Sad, Wretched Reality of New York City's First Casino
NYC’s First Full Casino Unveiled: Early Look Inside Resorts World Queens After Grand Opening
News
Navy Seal who killed bin Laden 15 years ago today recalls the mission and the 9/11 motivation: ‘I just shot that f–ker in the face’
‘I Just Shot That F–ker in the Face’: SEAL’s Raw Recollection of Bin Laden Raid 15 Years Later
News
Categories
Archives
May 2026
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
« Apr    
- Advertisement -

You Might Also Like

Handcuffing ICE will cost Americans big-time — and not just in crime
News

ICE Constraints Spark Warnings of Crime Spikes and Fiscal Strain

February 13, 2026
News

Las Vegas valley residents react to inventory market volatility; financial skilled shares perception

April 10, 2025
The Cost of Tipping: Why More Local Diners Are Boycotting Restaurants with Automatic Service Fees
News

The Cost of Tipping: Why More Local Diners Are Boycotting Restaurants with Automatic Service Fees

March 5, 2026
Jury finds Instagram and YouTube liable in landmark social media addiction trial
News

Instagram and YouTube Held Liable in Pioneering Trial Over Child Social Media Addiction

March 25, 2026

© Las Vegas News. All Rights Reserved – Some articles are generated by AI.

A WD Strategies Brand.

Go to mobile version
Welcome to Foxiz
Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?