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WASHINGTON – A recent study highlights a concerning trend: wildfires in North America are burning longer into the night and starting earlier in the morning. This shift is largely attributed to human-induced climate change, which is prolonging the hot, dry conditions that fuel these fires.
Traditionally, cooler nighttime temperatures and increased humidity would slow or even extinguish wildfires. However, this pattern is becoming less frequent. According to research published in Science Advances, the number of hours conducive to wildfires has increased by 36% over the past 50 years across North America.
Regions like California now experience an additional 550 hours of potential fire activity compared to the mid-1970s. Meanwhile, areas in southwestern New Mexico and central Arizona have seen increases of up to 2,000 hours annually. The study, which focused on both the United States and Canada, identified periods with favorable fire conditions, though fires did not necessarily occur during all these times.
Recent significant wildfires in Los Angeles and Hawaii have also burned through the night, presenting additional challenges for firefighting efforts. Notably, the 2023 Lahaina fire in Hawaii ignited shortly after midnight, as did the 2024 Jasper fire in Alberta and the 2025 fires in Los Angeles, underscoring the increased difficulty of combating nocturnal blazes.
Fires that surge at night are tougher to fight and included the Lahaina, Hawaii fire in 2023, the Jasper fire in Alberta in 2024 and the Los Angeles fires in 2025, the study said. Maui’s fire ignited at 12:22 a.m.
It’s not just the clock that is getting extended. The calendar is too. The number of days with fire-prone weather increased by 44%, which effectively added 26 days over the past half century.
It’s mostly from warmer, drier nighttime weather, with a bit of extra wind, the study authors said.
“Fires normally slow down during the night, or they just stop,” said study co-author Xianli Wang, a fire scientist with the Canadian Forest Service. “But under extreme fire hazard conditions, fire actually burns through the night or later into the night.”
And Wang said Earth’s warming atmosphere means it’s like to get worse.
Tougher to fight fires at night
Fires that don’t “go to sleep” get a running start the next day, making it harder to knock them down, University of California Merced fire scientist John Abatzoglou, who wasn’t part of the study, said in an email.
“Nights aren’t what they used to be — that is, more reliable breaks for wildfire,” he added. “Widespread warming and lack of humidity is keeping fires up at night.”
Wildland firefighter Nicholai Allen, who also founded a firm that makes home fire prevention tools, said it’s very difficult to fight fires at night.
“You have to understand that you have snakes and bears and mountain lions and all the stuff you have in daytime,” Allen said, noting a colleague was bitten by a bear. “But at night, they’re really scared and they’re running away from the fire.”
The Canadian researchers analyzed nearly 9,000 larger fires from 2017 to 2023 using a weather satellite and other tools to get hour-by-hour data on atmospheric conditions during the fires, such as humidity, temperature, wind, rain and fuel moisture levels. They created a computer model that correlated weather conditions and fire status and applied to historical data in Canada and the United States from 1975 to 2106.
Nights are warming faster than days
Scientists have long said heat-trapping gases from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas make nights warm faster than days because of increased cloud cover that absorbs and re-emits heat down to Earth at night like a blanket. Since 1975, summers in the contiguous U.S. have seen nighttime lowest temperature warm by 2.6 degrees Fahrenheit (1.4 degrees Celsius), while daytime highest temperatures have gone up 2.2 degrees Fahrenheit (1.2 degrees Celsius), according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Humidity at night “doesn’t rebound” from its daytime dryness like it used to, said study lead author Kaiwei Luo, a fire science researcher at the University of Alberta.
Wildfires often coincide with drought, especially extreme drought, which means not only drier air, but hotter drier air that sucks up more moisture from the ground and plants, making fuels for fire more flammable, Wang said. In a drought, there’s often a vicious circle of drying and when it is quite dry, a warmer atmosphere has more power to suck moisture out of fuels.
Just as warmer nights especially in heat waves don’t let the body recover, the warmer nights are not allowing forests to recover, Wang said. It can take weeks for dead fuel to recover their lost moisture and be less fire-prone, he said.
“It’s just a stress to the plants,” Wang said. “That also increases fuel load and make fire-burning more easily.”
From 2016 to 2025, wildfires in the United States on average burned an area the size of Massachusetts each year, slightly more than 11,000 square miles (28,500 square kilometers). That’s 2.6 times the average burn area of the 1980s, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. Canada’s land burned on average for the last 10 years is 2.8 times more than during the 1980s, according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre.
Syracuse University fire scientist Jacob Bendix, who wasn’t part of the research, called the study a sobering reminder of climate change’s role in driving “increased fire potential across almost all of the fire-prone environments of North America.”
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