Wildfire

Wildfires are any unplanned or uncontrolled fire affecting natural, cultural, industrial and residential landscapes (adapted from FAO, 2010).

Wildfires are not a major cause of death, but they can be very destructive. Many wildfires are caused by human activities, either accidentally or as a consequence of carelessness, or arson. These fires often get out of control and spread over vast areas extending to tens or hundreds of thousands of hectares.

Research shows that wildfires can cause a large increase in gaseous air pollutants such as carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, acetaldehyde and formaldehyde (Finlay et al., 2012). Wood smoke has high levels of particulate matter and toxins, Adverse health consequences can occur as a result of short- or long-term exposure. Respiratory morbidity predominates, but cardiovascular, opthalmic and psychiatric problems can also result (HPI).

Wildfires represent a hazard that is primarily influenced by humans and thus to a degree can be predicted, controlled and, in many cases, prevented. Wildfire occurence, characteristics and impacts are closely linked to other hazards: droughts, heat waves and extreme weather events can influence fire intensity and severity and thus the duration, size and controllability of wildfires. The effects of wildfires on vegetation cover and soil stability may create secondary hazards/subsidiary perils, such as post-fire landslides, mudslides, flash floods, erosion and siltation.

Risk factors

  • Increasing demand for agricultural lands for food and the necessity to use fire for land-use change.
  • The expansion of residential areas/infrastructures built near fire-prone vegetation - the Wildland Urban Interface (WUI).
  • Extended periods of drought and extreme heat.
  • Wildfires cause more land degradation (soil erosion, loss of land productivity) and as a consequence create more flooding and landslides.

Vulnerable areas

  • Agricultural and pasture lands in which fire is used for controlling weeds, bush encroachments, and for land clearing.
  • Fire-prone natural forest, bush land and grassland ecosystems with high occurrence of natural fires in the subtropics or northern latitudes.
  • Agricultural and forest plantations.
  • Residential areas or scattered houses/infrastructures nearest to fire-prone vegetation.
  • Residential areas or individual structures made of easily flammable materials.
  • Abandoned rural villages and human settlements with no one to manage, prevent or respond to wildfires.

Risk reduction measures

  • Limit development in high bushfire risk areas.
  • Clear the vegetation surrounding homes and other structures.
  • Build fire lanes or breaks between homes and any forested or bush land areas, if a natural firebreak does not exist.
  • Plant vegetation of low flammability.
  • Use fire-resistant building materials.
  • Use traditional and advanced methods of prescribed burning for sustainable agriculture and flora and fauna management.
  • Enact legislation and regulation at the appropriate jurisdictional levels.
  • Conduct community-based fire risk minimization activities during all stages of fire management.
  • Provide community alerts through fire danger rating systems.
  • Educate the community and raise public awareness about the risks of wildfires.
  • Develop firefighting capacities and public safety.

Latest Wildfire additions in the Knowledge Base

Delegates at the meeting in Stepanavan mark the Making Cities Resilient campaign entry of Berd, Noyemberyan and Tumanyan in Armenia; Tbilisi and Gori in Georgia; Bishkek and Karakol in Kyrgyzstan; and Ust-Kamenogorsk and Ridder in Kazakhstan (Photo: UNISDR)
Update
A global campaign that unites almost 3,000 cities dedicated to reducing urban disaster risk has sharpened its focus on Central Asia and the South Caucasus thanks to a regional role model.
United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR)
United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction - Sub-Regional Office for Central Asia (historical record)
Documents and publications

This report reviews climate change’s impact on the United States' Western wildfires, discusses their rising costs and increasing size, and projects that in order to fight them, the US Forest Service will have to spend nearly twice as much every year over

Update
A new report from the Center for American Progress projects that the U.S. Forest Service will have to spend 80% more per year over the next decade to fight wildfires in Colorado and other Western states, compared with the past five years. Based on historic data and trends, wildfires could burn an average of 10.5 million acres nationally per year between 2015 and 2024...
Center for American Progress
Trainee Bobby Robedeaux, of a fire fighting squad of the Pawnee, Ponca and Otoe tribes, traverses a burned out hillside, looking for hotspots, in Hailey, Idaho, in 2013. (Photo: USDA/Lance Cheung)
Update
This year’s International Day for Disaster Reduction highlighted the power of traditional, indigenous and local knowledge to protect people and communities, and the issue has been in the foreground at a conference of more than 3,000 officials and experts in fire risk management.
United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR)
United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction - Office in Incheon for Northeast Asia and Global Education and Training Institute for Disaster Risk Reduction
Documents and publications

RSIS Comentary, no. 208, October 2015:

This short paper presents the current Southeast Asian haze problem. According to it, the ineffectiveness of forest fire prevention and response lies deeper in the complex disaster governance landscape in Indonesia

Update
An editorial in the Bloomberg View reports that forest mismanagement may be the biggest culprit in California's wildfires. 'If smaller wildfires had been allowed to burn 20 years ago, the forest wouldn't have grown so dense, and today's flames wouldn't have had the fuel to reach the canopy and send embers flying, spreading the blaze and resulting in three deaths and the loss of some 600 houses'...
Bloomberg LP
Documents and publications

This study examines an aspect of wildfire disaster mitigation and recovery that has not been previously investigated. It seeks to analyse to what degree homeowners have actually adopted and implemented FireSmart measures to mitigate the risk of future

Update
The 2015 wildfire season is not only setting records for acres burned, it's also nearing the costliest on record, reports USA Today. With $1.23 billion spent so far this year to fight the blazes, the U.S. Forest Service is approaching its all-time record for firefighting costs of $1.65 billion, set in fiscal year 2002...
USA Today - Gannet Co. Inc.
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