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What do the Australian black summer fires signify for the global fire crisis?

Citation

Nolan, RH and Bowman, DMJS and Clarke, H and Haynes, K and Ooi, MKJ and Price, OF and Williamson, GJ and Whittaker, J and Bedward, M and Boer, MM and Cavanagh, VI and Collins, L and Gibson, RK and Griebel, A and Jenkins, ME and Keith, DA and Mcilwee, AP and Penman, TD and Samson, SA and Tozer, MG and Bradstock, RA, What do the Australian black summer fires signify for the global fire crisis?, Fire, 4, (97) ISSN 2571-6255 (2021) [Refereed Article]


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Copyright Statement

Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

DOI: doi:10.3390/fire4040097

Abstract

The 2019–20 Australian fire season was heralded as emblematic of the catastrophic harm wrought by climate change. Similarly extreme wildfire seasons have occurred across the globe in recent years. Here, we apply a pyrogeographic lens to the recent Australian fires to examine the range of causes, impacts and responses. We find that the extensive area burnt was due to extreme climatic circumstances. However, antecedent hazard reduction burns (prescribed burns with the aim of reducing fuel loads) were effective in reducing fire severity and house loss, but their effectiveness declined under extreme weather conditions. Impacts were disproportionately borne by socially disadvantaged regional communities. Urban populations were also impacted through prolonged smoke exposure. The fires produced large carbon emissions, burnt fire-sensitive ecosystems and exposed large areas to the risk of biodiversity decline by being too frequently burnt in the future. We argue that the rate of change in fire risk delivered by climate change is outstripping the capacity of our ecological and social systems to adapt. A multi-lateral approach is required to mitigate future fire risk, with an emphasis on reducing the vulnerability of people through a reinvigoration of community-level capacity for targeted actions to complement mainstream fire management capacity.

Item Details

Item Type:Refereed Article
Keywords:wildfire, smoke, demographics, fuel, climate change, adaptation, resilience, policy, human health
Research Division:Agricultural, Veterinary and Food Sciences
Research Group:Forestry sciences
Research Field:Forestry fire management
Objective Division:Environmental Policy, Climate Change and Natural Hazards
Objective Group:Adaptation to climate change
Objective Field:Ecosystem adaptation to climate change
UTAS Author:Bowman, DMJS (Professor David Bowman)
UTAS Author:Williamson, GJ (Dr Grant Williamson)
ID Code:148443
Year Published:2021
Web of Science® Times Cited:16
Deposited By:Plant Science
Deposited On:2022-01-11
Last Modified:2022-08-29
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