National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service Home Page. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Home Page. National Climatic Data Center Home Page. Department of Commerce Home Page. NOAA, National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information ServiceNational Climatic Data Center, U.S. Department of Commerce

State of the Climate
U.S. Wildfire
July 2007

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

National Climatic Data Center


Use the form below to access monthly reports.

« June 2007
U.S. Wildfire Report
August 2007 »
U.S. Wildfire Report


Fire activity spread dramatically across the West this past month. During mid–July, wildfires were burning across northern Nevada, eastern Oregon, and southern and central Idaho, and during the latter half of July activity was focused across the Northern Rockies.

Large fires on 31 July 2007
Large fires - 31 July 2007

As of July 31st, 46 large fires were actively burning, with fire activity in late July focused on central Idaho and northwest Montana. Wildfires were also quite active across parts of the Northwest Territories and north-central Canada this past month

According to estimates from the National Interagency Fire center (NIFC), as of August 7th over 58,300 wildland fires were reported across the U.S. so far in 2007, with approximately 5.39 million Acres Burned.

U.S. Drought Monitor map from 31 July 2007
U.S. Drought Monitor map
from 31 July 2007

Unusually dry conditions and severe–to–extreme drought across most of the West has resulted in a large region of extreme fire potential according to the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) experimental fire potential index.

At the end of the month, the highest fire danger remained across parts of California, the Northern Rockes, the Great Basin, and the Columbia Plateau.

Fire Danger map from 31 July 2007
Fire Danger map from 31 July 2007

The numerous active fires generated vast smoke palls and poor air quality across northern portions of the Great Plains, as well as across northern and central Canada. By early August, the smoke pall generated by wildfires in Idaho and Montana had spread further south into the central Plains.

Dead fuel moisture levels have continued to dry out across the western U.S. during July. The 10–hour fuel moisture levels on July 31st were exceptionally dry throughout most of the western U.S.

2007 Wildfire Statistics (Source: NIFC)
Totals as of July 31st Nationwide Number of Fires Nationwide Number of Acres Burned
7/31/2007 57,197 5,073,197
7/31/2006 70,948 5,621,014
7/31/2005 38,371 4,673,837
7/31/2004 47,650 5,495,416
7/31/2003 36,301 1,822,974
7/31/2002 53,070 4,258,849
7/31/2001 50,054 1,547,312
7/31/2000 60,988 3,550,065

Medium to larger fuels (i.e., the July 31st 100–hr and July 31st 1000–hr fuel moistures) were also exceptionally dry, with the driest fuel conditions across a large area that encompassed most of California, the Great Basin, and Columbia Plateau.

The Keetch–Byram Drought Index (KBDI), a widely used drought index for fire risk, had the largest potential for wildland fire activity in the contiguous U.S. across California and Nevada, as well as most of the Southeast.



Questions?

For questions on technical or scientific content of this report, please contact:

Karsten Shein:
Karsten.Shein@noaa.gov

For general climate monitoring questions, please contact:

CMB.Contact@noaa.gov

For climate data orders, please contact the National Climatic Data Center's Climate Services and Monitoring Division:

NCDC.Orders@noaa.gov

[ top ]