Wildfires are striking closer and closer to cities. We know how this will end

Wildfires are striking closer and closer to cities. We know how this will endThe cli­mate cri­sis is a fac­tor, but so are efforts to fight fires — which have had the oppo­site effect We call them wild­fires, but that might not be the right word any more.In recent days, at least five whole towns have been destroyed by fire in Ore­gon. So has much of Malden, Wash­ing­ton, and swathes of Big Creek and Berry Creek, both in California.To many peo­ple this will seem like deja vu. In 2018, anoth­er town was also wiped off the map, in the most dra­mat­ic recent exam­ple of this hor­ri­ble genre. Par­adise, Cal­i­for­nia, was much larg­er, home to 27,000, and it was destroyed in just a few hours. Eighty-five peo­ple were killed.The places now being rav­aged are not forests or chap­ar­ral locat­ed some­where out there, in the wilds. Instead the cur­rent wild­fires demon­strate how easy it has become for fires to invade our sub­urbs and towns, with their 7–11s, gas sta­tions and doc­tors’ offices, and lay them to waste. Where will this end? The prospects are disturbing.To under­stand how we got here, it is impor­tant to know that we have come to expect con­trol over such con­fla­gra­tions rel­a­tive­ly recent­ly. Pri­or to Euro­pean set­tle­ment in the West, fire flowed freely, sparked by light­ning or inten­tion­al­ly by Native Amer­i­cans to encour­age the growth of favored plants or clear areas for eas­i­er hunt­ing. As much as 4.5m acres of California’s 105m acres might burn every year. These low-inten­si­ty fires did not kill large trees, and some plants even came to depend on fire to regen­er­ate them­selves. A shrub called chamise appears to encour­age fire by releas­ing com­bustible gas­es in the pres­ence of flames.The shift to a dif­fer­ent approach occurred after sev­er­al instances in which wild­fires became appalling urban fires. In Octo­ber 1871, rail­way work­ers sparked a brush fire in north­ern Wis­con­sin, which swept into the city of Peshti­go and killed 1,500 peo­ple there and else­where across a gar­gan­tu­an foot­print of 1.2 mil­lion acres. And in the great fires of 1910, fires burn­ing across sev­er­al West­ern states killed hun­dreds and razed a num­ber of towns. Peo­ple escaped by train as the fires vir­tu­al­ly licked at their heels.After this the US sought to sup­press all wild­fires before they could gain a foothold. In the 1930s, the US For­est Ser­vice insti­tut­ed its so-called 10am pol­i­cy, accord­ing to which fires had to be stamped out by that time the next day. Lat­er came the “10-acre pol­i­cy”, dic­tat­ing that fires should not be per­mit­ted to grow beyond that size. Fire was the ene­my, an idea cat­alyzed by wartime imagery of fire­bombed cities such as Dres­den, Ham­burg and Tokyo. Smokey Bear helped to rein­force it, too.This strat­e­gy had a pro­nounced effect – though not nec­es­sar­i­ly in ways that were intend­ed. Fire activ­i­ty decreased, it is true, but with scour­ing flames removed from the envi­ron­ment, forests grew far denser and brushi­er than they had been before. In one Ari­zona for­est, 20 trees per acre became 800 trees per acre. These forests can and will burn more severe­ly. In addi­tion the cli­mate cri­sis is ren­der­ing veg­e­ta­tion ever dri­er, and by 2050 up to three times more acreage in West­ern forests will burn as a result of glob­al warm­ing. Mean­while 60m homes can now be found in or close to high-risk areas where wild­fires have pre­vi­ous­ly burned.Cue urban fires. The fire that oblit­er­at­ed Par­adise on the morn­ing of Novem­ber 8, 2018 was sparked in a rur­al riv­er canyon sev­er­al miles to the east of town. As we describe in our new book, Fire in Par­adise: An Amer­i­can Tragedy, it approached the com­mu­ni­ty at speeds pre­vi­ous­ly thought impos­si­ble, chew­ing through almost 400 Amer­i­can foot­ball fields’ worth of veg­e­ta­tion per minute. It hit like a hur­ri­cane. Strik­ing­ly, many of the hun­dreds of thou­sands of trees in the town were spared – it was the homes that became match­es set­ting fire to the next. The fire was so quick, so hot, that peo­ple died seek­ing shel­ter under their cars, in the dri­ve­ways of their homes while hold­ing a hose, or hud­dled in their bathtub.Lincoln Bramwell, the chief his­to­ri­an of the US For­est Ser­vice, told us that the sto­ry of Par­adise “reads like these accounts from the late 19th cen­tu­ry”, of fires like Peshti­go, back before we had sought to bring wild­fire under our com­mand. “I see us going back to the future,” he added. “Going back to a time when fire was not under our control.”As Amer­i­cans in Cal­i­for­nia, Wash­ing­ton and Ore­gon are dis­cov­er­ing, wild­fires do not only impact the wilder­ness. Towns and sub­urbs are not invi­o­late. With so many of our West­ern par­adis­es now under threat, experts are beg­ging us to bring con­trolled fire back into the ecosys­tem in the form of pre­scribed burns. To ensure build­ings meet strin­gent fire codes. And to pre­pare city evac­u­a­tion plans so we do not repeat the grid­lock in which many of those escap­ing Par­adise were trapped. We must, it almost goes with­out say­ing, get a han­dle on the cli­mate crisis.Witnessing the urban fire in Par­adise, some of those we inter­viewed for our book no longer thought it fan­ci­ful that a fire that could maraud into the very heart of a major city, such as Los Ange­les, San Diego or the com­mu­ni­ties of the San Fran­cis­co Bay.University of Cal­i­for­nia sci­en­tist Faith Kearns recount­ed to us that she lives in the Berke­ley flat­lands, in a part of the Bay that is as thor­ough­ly urban­ized as can be. Sud­den­ly she was con­sid­er­ing the prospect that a fire might one day reach her home.“My neigh­bor­hood is full of Vic­to­ri­ans. My neighbor’s win­dow is about six feet away from my own…” she said, paus­ing in thought. “I think we’ll see it. I think we’ll see it.” * Alas­tair Gee and Dani Anguiano are the authors of Fire in Par­adise: An Amer­i­can Tragedy, avail­able from WW Nor­ton. Read an excerpt here




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