Wildfires are a natural disturbance for these regions, but when combined with climate change and housing growth in the wildland-urban interface, they become larger and more destructive
Summer and fall are wildfire season across the western U.S. In recent years, wildfires have destroyed thousands of homes, forced hundreds of thousands of people to evacuate and exposed tens of millions to harmful smoke.
Wildfires are a natural disturbance for these regions, but when combined with and housing growth 鈥 zones where development has spread into wild areas 鈥 they have become larger and more destructive. 听
To make matters worse, humans are responsible for starting almost all the wildfires in developed areas that threaten U.S. homes. In a newly published study, we show that through activities like , people ignited of home-threatening wildfires in the wildland-urban interface between 1992 and 2015. For comparison, when fires in undeveloped areas are also counted, humans started between 1992 and 2012, with lightning as the main natural cause.
Common and costly
Wildfires in developed areas threatened one million homes across the lower 48 states that sat within their boundaries in the years we reviewed in our study. This figure is than previous estimates, which did not consider the threat of small fires 鈥 those measuring less than 1.5 square miles (4 square kilometers).
Human-started fires in these zones carry a high price tag. Over 15 years, between 2000 and 2014, state and local governments spent US$4.1 billion fighting wildfires near homes. That鈥檚 equivalent to one-third of the national wildfire control budget, even though the wildland-urban interface represents only 10% of U.S. land area.
And development in these areas is increasing. Between 1990 and 2015, 32 million new homes were built in the wildland-urban interface 鈥 .
Wildfires in developed areas threatened one million homes across the lower 48 states that sat within their boundaries in the years we reviewed in our study."
听Since 2000, wildfires have burned 10 of the largest areas since 1970. During these years, average U.S. summertime (June- August) temperatures rose steadily. (Fire data from NIFC, temperature data from NOAA).听Nathan Mietkiewicz,听
Climate change is adding to the problem by making much of the U.S. West hotter and drier, and thus . Warming that has already occurred is linked to a since 1984.
As warming continues, small fires started by people either accidentally or deliberately in the wildland-urban interface could grow into large fires. , increased burning and having more homes to protect pose a potentially insurmountable resource challenge.
But the fact that people start the vast majority of wildfires that threaten homes also means it is possible to remove these wildfires from the equation. The way to do this is by altering common human behaviors that introduce ignitions. Key solutions may include:
鈥 Doing more routine maintenance of infrastructure, such as .
鈥 Organizing campaigns to reduce use of .
鈥 Limiting use of motorized equipment for yard work and banning debris burning during hot and dry conditions.
鈥 Conducting more planned burns in high-risk areas like the wildland-urban interface during low-fire risk times of year. This work should target areas in these zones where ignition rates and threats to homes are high. These areas should receive high priority for fuel treatments or prescribed burning as preventative measures. 听
suggest that people are not going to stop moving to beautiful but flammable areas. This means that more homes will be vulnerable to wildfires, and more people will be engaging in activities that could start them. We think it鈥檚 time for to move to the suburbs, with a new slogan: 鈥淥nly you can prevent wildfires that threaten your home.鈥
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