Climate modification made lethal wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus much more strong, research study finds

Popular Reads 2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school church Who was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspect Trump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to t

Climate modification made lethal wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus much more strong, research study finds

Popular Reads


2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school church


Who was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspect


Trump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President Trump


Related Topics


Sponsored Content by Taboola


Popular Reads


2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school church


Trump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President Trump


Who was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspect


Trump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shooting


ABC News Live


  • Aug 27, 11:45 PM
  • Aug 28, 3:29 PM
  • Aug 17, 3:05 PM
  • Aug 27, 11:45 PM
  • Aug 17, 3:05 PM
  • Aug 28, 3:29 PM
  • Aug 28, 5:50 PM

ABC NewsLiveVideoShowsShopInterest Successfully AddedWe'll notify you here with news aboutTurn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest? OffOnStream onClimate change made deadly wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus more fierce, study findsA new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercelyByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated PressATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds. WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires. Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMGavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.___The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Related TopicsTurkeyGreeceSponsored Content by TaboolaPopular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PMABC News Live24/7 coverage of breaking news and live eventsABC News NetworkPrivacy PolicyYour US State Privacy RightsChildren's Online Privacy PolicyInterest-Based AdsAbout Nielsen MeasurementTerms of UseDo Not Sell or Share My Personal InformationContact Us © 2025 ABC News

ABC NewsLiveVideoShowsShopInterest Successfully AddedWe'll notify you here with news aboutTurn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest? OffOnStream onClimate change made deadly wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus more fierce, study findsA new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercelyByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated PressATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds. WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires. Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMGavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.___The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Related TopicsTurkeyGreeceSponsored Content by TaboolaPopular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PMABC News Live24/7 coverage of breaking news and live eventsABC News NetworkPrivacy PolicyYour US State Privacy RightsChildren's Online Privacy PolicyInterest-Based AdsAbout Nielsen MeasurementTerms of UseDo Not Sell or Share My Personal InformationContact Us © 2025 ABC News

ABC NewsLiveVideoShowsShopInterest Successfully AddedWe'll notify you here with news aboutTurn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest? OffOnStream onClimate change made deadly wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus more fierce, study findsA new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercelyByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated PressATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds. WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires. Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMGavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.___The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Related TopicsTurkeyGreeceSponsored Content by TaboolaPopular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PMABC News Live24/7 coverage of breaking news and live eventsABC News NetworkPrivacy PolicyYour US State Privacy RightsChildren's Online Privacy PolicyInterest-Based AdsAbout Nielsen MeasurementTerms of UseDo Not Sell or Share My Personal InformationContact Us © 2025 ABC News

ABC NewsLiveVideoShowsShopInterest Successfully AddedWe'll notify you here with news aboutTurn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest? OffOnStream onClimate change made deadly wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus more fierce, study findsA new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercelyByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated PressATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds. WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires. Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMGavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.___The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Related TopicsTurkeyGreeceSponsored Content by TaboolaPopular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PMABC News Live24/7 coverage of breaking news and live eventsABC News NetworkPrivacy PolicyYour US State Privacy RightsChildren's Online Privacy PolicyInterest-Based AdsAbout Nielsen MeasurementTerms of UseDo Not Sell or Share My Personal InformationContact Us © 2025 ABC News

ABC NewsLiveVideoShowsShopInterest Successfully AddedWe'll notify you here with news aboutTurn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest? OffOnStream on

ABC NewsLiveVideoShowsShopInterest Successfully AddedWe'll notify you here with news aboutTurn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest? OffOnStream on

Interest Successfully AddedWe'll notify you here with news aboutTurn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest? OffOn

Interest Successfully AddedWe'll notify you here with news aboutTurn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest? OffOn

Interest Successfully AddedWe'll notify you here with news aboutTurn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest? OffOn

Turn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest?

Climate change made deadly wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus more fierce, study findsA new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercelyByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated PressATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds. WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires. Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMGavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.___The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Related TopicsTurkeyGreeceSponsored Content by TaboolaPopular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PMABC News Live24/7 coverage of breaking news and live events

Climate change made deadly wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus more fierce, study findsA new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercelyByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated PressATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds. WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires. Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMGavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.___The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Related TopicsTurkeyGreeceSponsored Content by TaboolaPopular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PMABC News Live24/7 coverage of breaking news and live events

Climate change made deadly wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus more fierce, study findsA new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercelyByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated PressATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds. WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires. Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMGavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.___The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Related TopicsTurkeyGreeceSponsored Content by TaboolaPopular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PMABC News Live24/7 coverage of breaking news and live events

Climate change made deadly wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus more fierce, study findsA new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercelyByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated PressATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds. WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires. Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMGavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.___The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Related TopicsTurkeyGreeceSponsored Content by TaboolaPopular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PMABC News Live24/7 coverage of breaking news and live events

Climate change made deadly wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus more fierce, study findsA new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercelyByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated PressATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds. WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires. Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMGavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.___The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Related TopicsTurkeyGreeceSponsored Content by TaboolaPopular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PMABC News Live24/7 coverage of breaking news and live events

Climate change made deadly wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus more fierce, study findsA new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercelyByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated PressATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds. WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires. Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMGavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.___The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Related TopicsTurkeyGreeceSponsored Content by Taboola

Climate change made deadly wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus more fierce, study findsA new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercelyByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated PressATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds. WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires. Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMGavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.___The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Related TopicsTurkeyGreeceSponsored Content by Taboola

Climate change made deadly wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus more fierce, study findsA new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely

A new study says climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely

ByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM

ByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM

ByMENELAOS HADJICOSTIS Associated PressAugust 27, 2025, 11:35 PM

1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated Press

1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated Press

1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated Press

1:13FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated Press

FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)The Associated Press

FILE - Local farmer Turkan Ozkan, 64, cries next to one of her animals killed during a wildfire in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, northwest Turkey, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)

ATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds. WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires. Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMGavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.___The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

ATHENS, Greece -- Climate change that has driven scorching temperatures and dwindling rainfall made massive wildfires in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus this summer burn much more fiercely, said a new study released Thursday.

The study by World Weather Attribution said the fires that killed 20 people, forced 80,000 to evacuate and burned more than 1 million hectares (2.47 million acres) were 22% more intense in 2025, Europe’s worst recorded year of wildfires.

Hundreds of wildfires that broke out in the eastern Mediterranean in June and July were driven by temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (about 104 Fahrenheit), extremely dry conditions and strong winds.

WWA, a group of researchers that examines whether and to what extent extreme weather events are linked to climate change, called its findings “concerning."

“Our study finds an extremely strong climate change signal towards hotter and drier conditions,” said Theodore Keeping, a researcher at Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College in London.

“Today, with 1.3 degrees C of warming, we are seeing new extremes in wildfire behaviour that has pushed firefighters to their limit. But we are heading for up to 3 degrees C this century unless countries more rapidly transition away from fossil fuels,” Keeping said.

The study found winter rainfall ahead of the wildfires had dropped by about 14% since the pre-industrial era, when a heavy reliance on fossil fuels began. It also determined that because of climate change, weeklong periods of dry, hot air that primes vegetation to burn are now 13 times more likely.

The analysis also found an increase in the intensity of high-pressure systems that strengthened extreme northerly winds, known as Etesian winds, that fanned the wildfires.

Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PM

Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PM

2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PM

2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PM

2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school church

2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school church

Who was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PM

Who was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PM

Who was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspect

Who was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspect

Trump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PM

Trump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PM

Trump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President Trump

Trump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President Trump

Gavriil Xanthopoulos, research director at the Institute of Mediterranean Forest Ecosystems of the Hellenic Agricultural Organization in Greece, said firefighters used to be able to wait for such winds to die down to control fires.

“It seems that they cannot count on this pattern anymore,” Xanthopoulos said. More study is needed to understand how the wind patterns are reaching high velocities more often, he said.

Flavio Lehner, an assistant professor in Earth and atmospheric sciences at Cornell University who was not involved in the WWA research, said its summary and key figures were consistent with existing literature and his understanding of how climate change is making weather more conducive to wildfire.

Climate change is “loading the dice for more bad wildfire seasons” in the Mediterranean, Lehner said.

The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PMABC News Live24/7 coverage of breaking news and live events

Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PMABC News Live24/7 coverage of breaking news and live events

Popular Reads2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PMTrump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PMWho was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PMTrump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PM

2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PM

2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school churchAug 27, 11:45 PM

2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school church

2 children killed, 17 hurt in mass shooting at Catholic school church

Trump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PM

Trump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President TrumpAug 17, 3:05 PM

Trump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President Trump

Trump-Putin summit: Zelenskyy to travel to DC on Monday to meet with President Trump

Who was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PM

Who was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspectAug 28, 3:29 PM

Who was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspect

Who was Robin Westman? Here's what we know about the Minneapolis shooting suspect

Trump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PM

Trump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shootingAug 28, 5:50 PM

Trump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shooting

Trump admin live updates: WH says all elements being investigated in school shooting

ABC News Live24/7 coverage of breaking news and live events

Share

What's Your Reaction?

Like Like 0
Dislike Dislike 0
Love Love 0
Funny Funny 0
Angry Angry 0
Sad Sad 0
Wow Wow 0