To answer my own question, Alaska loses half the acreage of the entire USA to wild fires and climate change is blamed. The highest recorded temperature ever recorded in Alaska was 100 degrees in Yukon! Wow! In 1915 Some of us will think, hang on. That's over 100 years ago. Hasn't the climate changed? Also, records show that bush fires burned way more acreage in the early part of the 20th Century but that is dismissed because they can't trust the data. Some fires were counted multiple times, some were started deliberately, the sizes were overestimated etc, etc. Basically, it doesn't fit our narrative so it can't.be right.
https://www.carbonbrief.org/factcheck-how-global-warming-has-increased-us-wildfires You have to scroll down for the chart and notice how, incredibly, they only begin to get reliable data at the absolute lowest level in 1983.
Computer modelling has a lot to answer for, what a load of bollox We should have scientists who know what they are talking about, not computer nerds putting numbers in a laptop and coming out with ****e that they want to suit their agenda. That **** Neil Ferguson has been doing it for 20+years and been proven to be wrong every time.
The Yukon is in Canada. The highest, as of 2019, temperatures in Alaska were https://www.climate.gov/news-featur...smash-all-time-records-alaska-early-july-2019 But if you did mean the Yukon then temperatures there are rising too. This from the Auditor General of Canada https://www.oag-bvg.gc.ca/internet/English/yuk_201712_e_42706.html And yes climate changes do appear to be affecting the forest fires in Alaska https://phys.org/news/2019-03-alaska-forest-years.html This must be boring the arse off everybody else so I'm going to stop now. I have my views and you have your. Lets leave it at that hey?