"Wildfire suppression" refers to the actions taken to control and put out wildfires. It involves efforts to prevent the spread of wildfires and manage their impact on people, property, and the environment by using various firefighting techniques and strategies. The goal is to extinguish the fire or reduce its intensity and minimize its damage.
Full definition
While the aggregate data available on wildfire costs can give us a sense for important trends, they are insufficient to assess the efficiency of
wildfire suppression efforts.
«Transferring funds to cover the cost
of wildfire suppression is disruptive and harmful to other critical Forest Service programs and services,» Jones said.
may not be flown or otherwise removed from the United States unless dispatched by the National Interagency Fire Center in support of an international agreement to assist
in wildfire suppression efforts or for other purposes approved by the Secretary of Agriculture in writing in advance.
«I don't think anybody doubts that the cost of fighting fires has gone up,» said Debbie Miley, executive director of the
National Wildfire Suppression Association (NWSA), a trade group for private wildfire fighters.
Over the last decade,
annual wildfire suppression costs on US federal lands exceeded $ 1.7 B US dollars7 and $ 1B US dollars in Canada8.
Crews and heavy equipment are
performing wildfire suppression, repairing areas affected by fire - suppression activities, and performing wildfire severity and hazard assessments.
Thus, there is an economic justification for
vesting wildfire suppression responsibilities in large - scale public agencies that can overcome these coordination costs.
In the West, wildfires tend to burn across a mosaic of private and public lands, which increases the costs of
coordinating wildfire suppression efforts across vast regions.
Second, homes in the WUI
drive wildfire suppression costs (not to mention safety concerns) and this interactive map and tables shows the level of WUI development at both county and state levels — and also what's not developed in terms of future costs.
This lack of evidence that Firewise
reduces wildfire suppression costs suggests that policy makers attempting to address future costs are better served focusing on other solutions such as limiting future development in high risk areas.
But wildland fires are increasingly destructive and costly in terms of lives and property, requiring substantial investments
in wildfire suppression.
Meanwhile, Los Angeles County will have two Bombardier CL - 415 Superscooper fire - fighting aircraft on loan from the government of Quebec starting in the fall
for wildfire suppression, as well as the county's own fleet of helicopters.
Anniversary coverage was much more likely to bring up policy problems connected to the systemic causes of human vulnerability to wildfire hazards — development in the wildland - urban interface, legacies
of wildfire suppression and climate change, to name a few examples.
«Over the past few decades,
wildfire suppression costs have increased as fire seasons have grown longer and the frequency, size, and severity of wildfires has increased,» Jones said.
The U.S. Forest Service announced yesterday that it has contracted for seven new «next generation» air tankers for
wildfire suppression, part of the service's ongoing efforts to replace its current, aging fleet.
How should federal agencies manage the overgrown forests generated by
wildfire suppression in the past?
Meanwhile, funding for the Office of Natural Resources Revenue will be sustained, the budget notes, and
wildfire suppression costs, estimated based on a «10 - year rolling average,» will be met in full.
None of the funding proposals currently on the table would alter the incentive structure that public agencies face when it comes to
wildfire suppression.
This means that it's not enough to examine aggregate data on costs of
wildfire suppression, or even the cost per acre burned, to assess the efficiency of suppression.
He has also served on
a wildfire suppression crew in California.