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Flash635 t1_ixd149x wrote

Where I live in Australia we haven't had one of those stinking hot summers we used to have for years. On the other hand, I haven't seen frost in winter for years either.

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RODjij t1_ixe6rqp wrote

Didn't most of Australia just burn over a couple of years ago from everything being dry and billions of animals gone?

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Spitinthacoola t1_ixe8gvd wrote

Australia's land area is about 770 million hectares. What burned in 2019-20 was about 17 million hectares.

Its a lot. But not even close to a majority. It's hard to imagine what that would be like, especially given how little of Australia's land is actually colonized with humans.

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imapassenger1 t1_ixec8q3 wrote

With 2/3 desert that is unlikely to burn the percentage is much higher.

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Spitinthacoola t1_ixeflwc wrote

That doesn't change the number in any way

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imapassenger1 t1_ixeh9u1 wrote

Of course it does. Take it as a percentage of the forests, not the grassy plains and deserts.

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Skraff t1_ixewinp wrote

125 million hectares of forest total. 24 million hectares burned in 2019/2020 fires.

A much bigger deal than mr “only 2 percent of the desert caught fire” that you are replying to.

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a8bmiles t1_ixemw1h wrote

Oh are we just throwing away data to make the results look better? Sure thing then!

"A couple years ago, 100% of Australia burned*"

^(* = measurement includes only areas that caught on fire)

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NedGaryNeb t1_ixf3c7a wrote

Take an example island that has 100 acres. 80 acres are baren desert and literally can't catch fire, the remaining 20 acres are forest. 10 of those acres catch fire.

Are you doing the destruction justice by saying just 10% of the island burned? Wouldn't saying "50% of the island that is flammable burned" more representative of the destruction?

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a8bmiles t1_ixfqaz9 wrote

Yes but see, you included the words "that is flammable" and reduced ambiguity. If you were the OP you would have said "50% of the island was on fire".

Do you see the difference?

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RAMAR713 t1_ixfokbc wrote

Don't be infantile. Both statements are correct, but the way you're presenting the data can be misleading and is generally less useful. When considering burned areas, what matters is what can burn.

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a8bmiles t1_ixfpbgv wrote

At least my way is clearly disingenuous and might cause someone to question the statement. His "most of Australia burned" statement is just believable enough to promulgate false information and result in someone believing that most of the land mass was on fire when that's obviously not true.

If he didn't want to be misleading he could have easily done so by adding a few more words to his statement.

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Clearlybeerly t1_ixg0424 wrote

We can do better than that.

"A couple of years ago, 200% of Australia burned.*"

  • = measurement only includes the areas that I personally care about. But other areas I don't care about also burned, so I guess they have to be included in the total total.
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Strazdas1 t1_ixgxebw wrote

Australias land area is also 90% desert. How many percentages of australian forest burned would be a better measure.

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Spitinthacoola t1_ixikat7 wrote

It isnt. Australia is less than. 20% desert. They landmass has nearly the same amount of forests as it does deserts. Yall have weird understandings of Australia.

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Strazdas1 t1_ixlbgwh wrote

Australia government says it has 16% landmass of forests https://www.agriculture.gov.au/abares/forestsaustralia/profiles/australias-forests-2016

about 35% of the Australian continent receives so little rain, it is practically desert

https://www.ga.gov.au/scientific-topics/national-location-information/landforms/deserts

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Spitinthacoola t1_ixlespp wrote

Yes, and again, even still less than 1% of the forested area burned during the time we are talking about. I'm not sure why you are trying to be argumentative about this.

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Strazdas1 t1_ixlg82m wrote

What im trying to say is that burned forest compared to total landmass is bad measure and should be compared to total forest mass.

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Spitinthacoola t1_ixlgnxp wrote

And I'm saying even compared to just forest area (not sure how to calculate mass of forests burned) its still like 1% of the area that was burned.

So even when you ignore about 80% of the country, about 1% was on fire.

Its so incredibly far from being anywhere near a majority.

I'm not going to respond to you anymore.

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Strazdas1 t1_ixplm6e wrote

Then thats what you should have been saying in the beginning. Also i think you are mixing me up with someone else, because i never said a majority was on fire.

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Spitinthacoola t1_ixpnrm5 wrote

You're literally jumping into a thread about that specific thing. I think you are perhaps mixed up about what is happening here.

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DepGrez t1_ixeteva wrote

Yes. 2019-2020 summer was brutal and this was the bushfire season that got the worlds attention due to literally everything being on fire. However shortly after the bushfires we've had 3 consecutive La Nina weather cycles meaning since Feb 2020 we've basically had above average rainfall and a lot of flooding.

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Flash635 t1_ixg42sc wrote

Not most and I don't think it was billions.

Australia has been part of the Great Southern Oscillation for ever. We're in the La Niña cycle right now and the West Coast of the US is in El Niño.

Those fires were at the end of a cyclic long drought and were ended by rains and flooding.

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some_qualms t1_ixedlk9 wrote

Is this the earth starting with them because of all the industrialization? We’re all next.

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jtblion t1_ixg23xm wrote

Doom-posting and 'We deserve it' rhetoric does nothing to solve the problem, and in fact feeds into denialist positions by essentially encouraging people to give up.

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