As the Western United States limps away from one of the warmest and driest winters on record, wildfires have burned over 127 percent more acreage so far in 2026 than the 10-year average, potentially setting the stage for a long, fiery summer. Updated data from the National Interagency Fire Center on the number of ignitions and total acres burned through March 27 shows the country has experienced over 15,000 starts that have consumed more than 1.5 million acres so far this year. The 10-year averages through March 27 are about 9,195 starts and 664,792 acres burned. …2026 ranked first for the number of ignitions by late March in any year of the past decade, with 587 more fires than the next-highest year. More fires in what has historically been a wetter part of the year “is becoming a normality,” said Timothy Ingalsbee, co-founder of Firefighters United for Safety, Ethics, and Ecology. “It is a clear signal of ongoing climate change.”
