@Article{Yu_NatCommun_20220322, author = {Yan Yu and Jiafu Mao and Stan D. Wullschleger and Anping Chen and Xiaoying Shi and Yaoping Wang and Forrest M. Hoffman and Yulong Zhang and Eric Pierce}, title = {Machine Learning--Based Observation-Constrained Projections Reveal Elevated Global Socioeconomic Risks from Wildfire}, journal = NatCommun, volume = 13, number = 1, pages = 1250, doi = {10.1038/s41467-022-28853-0}, abstract = {Reliable projections of wildfire and associated socioeconomic risks are crucial for the development of efficient and effective adaptation and mitigation strategies. The lack of or limited observational constraints for modeling outputs impairs the credibility of wildfire projections. Here, we present a machine learning framework to constrain the future fire carbon emissions simulated by 13 Earth system models from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 6 (CMIP6), using historical, observed joint states of fire-relevant variables. During the twenty-first century, the observation-constrained ensemble indicates a weaker increase in global fire carbon emissions but higher increase in global wildfire exposure in population, gross domestic production, and agricultural area, compared with the default ensemble. Such elevated socioeconomic risks are primarily caused by the compound regional enhancement of future wildfire activity and socioeconomic development in the western and central African countries, necessitating an emergent strategic preparedness to wildfires in these countries.} }