ABC News February 23, 2022

Number of extreme wildfires will rise 50% by 2100, and governments are not prepared: UN report

WATCH: Climate change explained by Ginger Zee

The world will soon experience a steep increase in the number of devastating wildfires as a result of human activity, according to new research released by the United Nations Environment Programme.

Climate change and land-use change are projected to make wildfires more frequent and intense, with extreme fires expected to rise 14% globally by 2030, 30% by the end of 2050 and 50% by 2100, according to the report released Wednesday.

MORE: Flocks of sheep are the firefighting solution we never knew we needed

"Wildfires and climate change are mutually exacerbating," the report states.

Wildfires are made worst by climate change through increased drought, higher temperatures and low relative humidity, while climate change is made worse by wildfires after they ravage "sensitive and carbon-rich" ecosystems such as rainforests.

The Mercury News/MediaNews Group via Getty Images
The Colorado Fire burns down toward the Bixby Bridge in Big Sur, Calif., Jan. 22, 2022.

"This turns landscapes into tinderboxes, making it harder to halt rising temperatures," the authors wrote.

MORE: Wildfire smoke associated with increase in severe COVID-19 cases and death, new research suggests

Extreme wildfire risk will become so widespread that even the Arctic and other regions previously unaffected by wildfires could be in peril of burning, according to the report. In addition, wildlife and their natural habitats will not be spared, pushing many species closer to extinction.

For instance, billions of domesticated and wild animals, including a large portion of the koala population, were estimated to have been wiped out during the bushfires that began in Australia at the end of 2019.

NurPhoto via Getty Images
Icebergs near Ilulissat, Greenland, May 8, 2021.

The increase of wildfires will also have social consequences on communities, as the world's poorest nations will be disproportionately affected, according to the U.N. People's health will be directly affected by the inhalation of wildfire smoke, and the costs of rebuilding areas struck by wildfires can be beyond the means of low-income countries.

The pollutants from frequent wildfires can also lead to soil erosion, causing more problems for waterways, and leave highly contaminated waste behind, the report states.

MORE: 'Like a freight train': Firefighters describe what it's like riding out a wildfire in a fire shelter, their last resort for safety

Governments are not prepared for the disastrous consequences these infernos will leave in their wake, the authors wrote.

The report calls for a radical change in government spending on wildfires, shifting their investments from reaction and response to prevention and preparedness.

Reuters, FILE
A Firefighter battles a wildfire in the norther province of Corrientes, in Portal San Antonio, Argentina, Feb. 14, 2022.

"Because fires are so interdisciplinary and across so many different sectors and impact society, culture and climate and the vegetation, it's essential that fire [management] actually be pushed within an agenda," Glynis Humphrey, a fire ecologist at the University of Capetown and one of the authors of the report, told reporters at a press conference Monday.

MORE: How climate change affects wildfires, like those in the West, and makes them worse

Governments should adopt a new "Fire Ready Formula," dedicating two-thirds of spending for planning, prevention, preparedness and recovery, with one-third left for response, the authors wrote.

The report also calls for stronger international standards for the safety and health of firefighters to minimize the risks they face before, during and after operations.