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  • Hotshots battling a wildfire in Tiller, Oregon back in 2002. Global warming triggers ever more and bigger wildfires. For the first time in its 110-year history, the Forest Service, part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, is spending more than 50 percent of its budget to suppress the nation's wildfires, according to a report released  August 5th 2015. "Climate change and other factors are causing the cost of fighting fires to rise every year," said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, "but the way we fund our Forest Service hasn't changed in generations.» The work done by hotshots and smoke jumpers is extremely dangerous, trying to contain and control the fire by cutting or burning off fuel on the ground. They are in good physical condition and have to be able to take care of themselves in case they get trapped by the unpredictable fires.
    20020804 14-14-210 2043196 copy.jpg
  • Hotshots battling a wildfire in Tiller, Oregon back in 2002. Global warming triggers ever more and bigger wildfires. For the first time in its 110-year history, the Forest Service, part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, is spending more than 50 percent of its budget to suppress the nation's wildfires, according to a report released  August 5th 2015. "Climate change and other factors are causing the cost of fighting fires to rise every year," said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, "but the way we fund our Forest Service hasn't changed in generations.» The work done by hotshots and smoke jumpers is extremely dangerous, trying to contain and control the fire by cutting or burning off fuel on the ground. They are in good physical condition and have to be able to take care of themselves in case they get trapped by the unpredictable fires.
    20020804 14-14-210 2043196 copy inst...jpg
  • Hotshots battling a wildfire in Tiller, Oregon back in 2002. Global warming triggers ever more and bigger wildfires. For the first time in its 110-year history, the Forest Service, part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, is spending more than 50 percent of its budget to suppress the nation's wildfires, according to a report released  August 5th 2015. "Climate change and other factors are causing the cost of fighting fires to rise every year," said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, "but the way we fund our Forest Service hasn't changed in generations.» The work done by hotshots and smoke jumpers is extremely dangerous, trying to contain and control the fire by cutting or burning off fuel on the ground. They are in good physical condition and have to be able to take care of themselves in case they get trapped by the unpredictable fires.
    20020804 14-14-210 2043196 copy inst...jpg
  • Tiller, Oregon, USA, 05.08.2002; A wildfire is only 10 percent contained in the Tiller area of Oregon.  4,8 million acres have succumbed to the flames so far in the US in the  2002 season. Amanda (26) is a "hot shot", a wildfire firefighter who works at the frontline. Hotshots and smoke jumpers have the most dangerous jobs, trying to contain and control the fire by cutting or burning off fuel on the ground. They are in good physical condition and have to be able to take care of themselves in case they get trapped by the unpredictable fires.
    20020804 14-14-210 2043196 copy.jpg
  • Tiller, Oregon, USA, 05.08.2002; A wildfire is only 10 percent contained in the Tiller area of Oregon.  4,8 million acres have succumbed to the flames so far in the US in the  2002 season. Amanda (26) is a "hot shot", a wildfire firefighter who works at the frontline. Hotshots and smoke jumpers have the most dangerous jobs, trying to contain and control the fire by cutting or burning off fuel on the ground. They are in good physical condition and have to be able to take care of themselves in case they get trapped by the unpredictable fires.
    20020804 14-14-210 2043196 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 150131 3493 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 150129 3491 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 145635 3458 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 150956 3557 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 150929 3534 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 150109 3479 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 145932 5510 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 145932 5510 copy cropped.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 142843 3413 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 150929 3534 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 150109 3479 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 145932 5510 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 142843 3413 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 150733 3522 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest, and has been lauded by climate deniers as proof that global warming is a hoax. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to be a carbon source. And it gets worse; Hundreds of wildfires are ravaging Alaska this summer, fueled by a warmer, dryer climate and huge patches of bone dry dead forest. Unlike a slow CO2 release from decomposing, wildfire release all the CO2 at once. The same warmweather has also resulted in a pine beetle invasion that destroy pine forest all over North America. In British Columbia alone, more than 44 million acres of forest are already destroyed according to National Geographic.
    20150526 150956 3557 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to emitter.
    Alamy 20150526 205826 6111 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to emitter.
    Alamy 20150526 210257 4517 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to emitter.
    Alamy 20150526 205948 4475 copy.jpg
  • A patch of damaged forest near Anchorage in Alaska. The borealis forest – typically pine, birch and larch - make up about thirty percent of all forest in the world. Less efficient than rain forests, it’s still a vital part of the carbon sink. The mean temperature in the arctic areas are already 1.5c warmer than normal. Higher levels of CO2 accelerate growth of the forest. However; as growth is accellerated, the lifespan of the trees is shortened. The net result is a CO2 saturated forest that turn from being a carbon sink to emitter.
    Alamy 20150526 205826 6111 copy kont...jpg
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