The Crisis Report — 19

The World’s Forests are Burning, Ecosystem Turnover is the Cause. Let’s All be Really Clear on What that Means. — Revisited

Richard Crim
8 min readApr 23, 2023
Across the Northern Hemisphere, summer has become fire season.

I am not a concise writer. I like to contextualize the issue I am discussing and provide a framework for understanding it. This tendency makes my climate articles run to the lengthy side. This time I’m going to try to be short and to the point.

I use the term “ecosystem turnover” frequently in my articles to explain why the planet is going to be plagued by fires on unbelievable scales for the rest of this century. The basic idea is that Global Warming is warming up the entire planet, so every ecosystem on the planet is going to change in response to that warming.

Not just “vulnerable” places, not just “some” places, every place is going to go through this. The ecosystem you live in right now is already dying.

You might not have noticed it yet, but the plants and animals have. When it reaches a tipping point where there is enough debris from the dying ecosystem laying around, fires will start happening.

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Richard Crim
Richard Crim

Written by Richard Crim

My entire life can be described in one sentence: Things didn’t go as planned, and I’m OK with that.

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