As many of us enjoy bright spells of sunshine, the question looming over many Fire and Rescue Services is simple: what kind of wildfire season are we facing? The devastation of 2022, which stretched resources to the limit and rewrote the UK's fire danger maps, remains a potent warning. This year, early warning signs are already present, creating a familiar pattern.
An analysis of climate data from the start of this year, compared with the lead-up to the 2022 events, identifies key trends and vulnerabilities.
For the UK, the combination of a wet winter and a fast spring dry-out creates a dangerous paradox. The rain fuels intense, rapid growth of moorland vegetation like heather and purple moor grass. This new growth dries then becomes an abundant fuel source - spread across approximately 4,000 square miles of the UK.
The Dry-Out Begins: As spring progressed, a switch flipped. March and April saw a rapid transition to drier, sunnier conditions. The highly productive biomass, fuelled by the winter rains, was primed to dry out with the first sustained spell of high pressure.
Initial analysis of Q1 2026 indicates a weather pattern that matches many conditions of 2022.
The first wildfire warning of 2026 has already been issued for March 20th-21st in Scotland - the first alert of 2022 was issued just one day later on the 22nd.
The events of 2022 demonstrated what happens when multiple high-risk factors align. A significant fuel load, a spring dry-out, and then, the unprecedented 40°C heatwave. The result was a 315% increase in wildfires across England and Wales, and 14 major incidents declared in just two days.
The 2026 wildfire season has the potential to be, at the very least, highly challenging. The first condition - heavy fuel growth due to a wet Winter - has been met. Our focus now turns to how quickly that fuel will dry.
Data is not just a warning signal, it can also be part of the response. Data-driven decision-making is at the core of successfully tackling fast-moving incidents. Visibility of all the moving parts can transform wildfire response:
The 2026 wildfire season is on the horizon - the early warning signs are clear. By understanding the climate context and using a data-centric approach to preparation Fire Chiefs can anticipate, rather than just react, to the challenges ahead.