Global Wildfires in 2025: Record Costs and Devastating Impacts
A recent study published on May 31, 2026, by the University of East Anglia highlights the devastating impacts of wildfires in 2025, despite the year recording the second-lowest global area burned since 2002. The report underscores a growing trend of increasingly extreme and costly wildfires, with significant societal and economic consequences. Catastrophic fires in regions such as Canada, the United States, Europe, and South Korea led to over 300,000 evacuations and more than 90 fatalities. The Los Angeles fires in January 2025 alone caused $40 billion in insured losses and $140 billion in total damages, making it one of the most expensive natural disasters in history. The study also notes a shift in wildfire patterns, with temperate and high-latitude regions experiencing more intense and destructive fires due to climate-driven factors like drought and heat waves.