Fires in the Far East | NASA Earth Observatory


April 21, 2021

Many farmers in northeastern China and eastern Russia use fire to clear fields and get them ready for planting.

With millions of hectares of corn, rice, and beans sown in Heilongjiang each year, the province in northeastern China is one of the country’s most important food-producing areas. For many Heilongjiang farmers, one of the first steps in raising this year’s crop involves burning off the remaining bits of last year’s plants to remove debris from the fields and get them ready for planting in May.

This practice sometimes leads to hazy, smoke-filled skies, as shown by this natural-color satellite image from the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on the NOAA-NASA Suomi NPP satellite. Throughout the spring, VIIRS has detected large numbers of “hotspots” associated with fires. These hotspots appear red and orange in the image above.

VIIRS began detecting sporadic fire activity in the region in mid-March 2021, as soon as warmer weather melted the snow cover. The number of fire detections then ballooned in mid-April, particularly around Harbin, as the spring burning season reached its peak.

Most straw burning in this area used to happen in the fall, but satellite observations collected over several years show that there has been a strong shift toward spring fires since 2015. That was the year that local authorities enacted fall burning restrictions—part of an effort to limit air pollution—and started encouraging farmers to find other uses for leftover straw. Most crop fires in Heilongjiang now happen in March and April, a change that has coincided with a reduction in overall greenhouse gas and particulate pollution emissions from the area’s fires, according to one recent study.

Fire activity has not been limited to China. Across the border in Russia, fires—many likely lit by farmers for similar reasons—have also been common along the Amur River.

More: Fires in the Far East

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Director of Manchester School of Samba at http://www.sambaman.org.uk
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2 Responses to Fires in the Far East | NASA Earth Observatory

  1. When I was a child, they were still doing this in Germany as well, but then it was found to be dangerous for health, and now they are plowing the remnants under.
    When I moved to Denmark they were still burning the fields all over (in August, distressing the German tourists). It is getting less now. A lot of farmers plow under now, only individual ones still burn their fields. I do not think, however, that there is legislation about it. How is it in Britain? I never saw fields being burned.

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    • agogo22's avatar agogo22 says:

      It was still common practice when I lived in the South as a child (40 years ago) but I don’t see it happening here in the North of England (but I’m in the city). I’d likely only ever see it through a car or train window at speed anyway!

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