A massive blaze scorches Gila National Forest in southwestern New Mexico, 29 May 2012. It's been deemed the largest fire in New Mexico history. According to NASA, the fire began in two separate incidents -- both sparked by lightning. The Baldy fire started 9 May 2012; the Whitewater fire, about 10 miles northwest, started 16 May 2012. The two fires merged 23 May 2012. U.S. Forest Service / Associated Press

By Mark Lubell
6 July 2012 Last week, my parents had to pack their belongings and flee as the Waldo Canyon fire barreled toward their house in Colorado Springs. They were among 32,000 people forced from their houses by the fire, which has destroyed nearly 350 homes. My parents were lucky. Despite the trauma and fear of having to evacuate, they didn’t lose their home. But the fire emphasized something of a long-running debate between my father and me: the reality and politics of climate change. I am a political scientist who studies climate policy and adaptation, and the intersection between climate science and politics. My father is also a scientist — a nuclear engineer. But he’s always been a bit skeptical about climate change. Though he’s not a full-on doubter, he also hasn’t fully embraced the idea that the planet is warming in ways that could be devastating, and that this change is the result of human activity. Events like the Waldo Canyon fire may make him and other climate skeptics easier to convince. No one can say that the Waldo Canyon fire was a direct result of climate change. But fires like it, and the weather conditions that create them, are exactly what climate models are predicting for arid Western landscapes from California to the Rocky Mountains. Colorado this year has been far drier than normal and has seen record-high temperatures. Streams are at something around 10% of their usual flow, and the spread of pine bark beetles has created tons of deadwood. Droughts have been a fact of life in the region for millenniums, but climate change is predicted to make them both more common and more severe. Of course, there are also other factors that have made this summer in Colorado such a perfect firestorm. For decades, fires have been suppressed in the area, which means there is a lot of fuel ready to burn. Neighborhoods have been allowed to encroach on forest land, which has meant that when fires come, they destroy not just trees but homes. This combination of human decisions and changing forest conditions is proving to be a recipe for disaster. The Waldo Canyon fire has also demonstrated the importance of preparing for the growing threats that are expected to accompany climate change. Individual people can’t solve climate change, but they can take steps to adapt to some of its devastating effects. Whether the danger is wildfire or other extreme events, communities must adapt to our emerging climate reality. Even if greenhouse gas emissions level out right now — which shows no sign of happening — the climate changes we’re experiencing will continue for a long time. We will see more fires like the Waldo throughout the West, and possibly other extreme weather events. […]

Colorado’s perfect firestorm