How do you fight extreme wildfires?
SOURCE BBC News
How do you fight extreme wildfires
The sight of soaring flames, burning trees and scorched earth is becoming a familiar one for people around the world.
From
Brazil to Australia, and from California to Indonesia, massive
wildfires have torn through vast areas of forest this year. So how do
you fight them?
Alexander Held, an expert in wildfires at the
European Forest Institute, and Kirsten Langmaid, a firefighter from
Australia, talk us through the process.
Step one: Preparation
Alexander: Landowners and the authorities can absolutely take action to better prepare for wildfires.
A
top priority should be managing the amount of vegetation a fire can
consume. This can be done with machinery or by grazing animals such as
sheep or goats. Plus, if a wildfire runs into a pasture area then it
will eventually die by itself because there won't be enough fuel.
The
controlled use of fire is another option. This involves burning some
down some vegetation under carefully managed conditions.
In high-risk areas, there
should also be control lines that divide up the land and make it harder
for wildfires to spread. These can be things like roads, rivers, railway
lines or constructed fire breaks. Fire breaks are areas that are free
of vegetation.
It's also important for homeowners to make sure
their house can be easily reached by firefighters. They need to keep on
top of any potential burning material around their home, like gas tanks
and fire wood.
Step two: Spotting the smoke
Alexander: Most
fire-prone countries have some form of early-warning system in place.
These assess the temperature, fuel level, humidity and wind speed. These
give a pretty good idea of what the coming days and weeks might look
like.
If there's an increased risk of wildfires then extra
firefighters are put in place, trucks are prepared and the pilots of
firefighting aircraft are put on standby.
If a fire ignites then
the first step in fighting it is smoke detection. That can either come
from a member of the public who reports it or, in remote areas, cameras
and lookout towers that spot it.
In some countries, firefighting
aircraft are sent out at the first sign of smoke. But this is different
in Europe where they don't tend to be mobilised until three or four days
later.
Step three: First attack
Alexander: This is the first phase of suppressing a wildfire.
Kirsten: We
always send a rapid response team out during this first attack. These
are crews who are fully kitted out with firefighting gear and
water-carrying vehicles.
If the location is a little more remote,
then we'll send a plane or a small helicopter up straight away. This is
usually just to check it out and they'll give us a rough estimate of
how big the fire is.
We use both dry and wet firefighting
techniques. The dry method involves creating boundaries around the fire
and letting it burn itself out. Either way, we try to contain it as soon
as possible. Hopefully during this initial attack.
Alexander: But if you can't suppress the fire in the first hour then you move onto the next phase: the extended attack.
Step four: Extended attack
Alexander:
If it gets to this point then you need a lot more resources. The more
time you give a wildfire to burn, the bigger they get and the more
difficult they become to control.
Kirsten: As
soon as the fire passes the first response phase we set up an incident
control team. This means we have people back in the office co-ordinating
the operation and thinking about the wider strategy.
If the fire
is close to a town then we'll throw everything at it. Initially it's
just vehicles and firefighters but then we'll move up to fire trucks and
then much larger tankers. We use a lot of machinery, like bulldozers,
to clear vegetation and create boundaries.
The tactic we use at
this point depends on the type of terrain. How we fight a grass fire
differs dramatically to how we would fight a pine fire or a tall forest
fire. But, generally speaking, it's a two-phased operation made-up of
direct and indirect attacks.
We directly attack the flanks of the
fire to narrow the front of it. This is often done with water, fire
beaters or by digging earth boundaries parallel to the flames. We try to
work from the areas that have already been burnt because these are
unlikely to catch fire again.
Alexander: But if
the fire is too intense and it's not safe to send people and fire trucks
in, you move to indirect attacks. This means positioning crews away
from the fire and attacking it with aircraft. You can also fight fire
with fire by burning down vegetation ahead of the flames.
Kirsten: When
we move to indirect attacks we mainly use aircraft to drop fire
retardant and water. But as soon as the smoke gets too bad and
visibility becomes too poor, we have to bring them back down again.
Another form of indirect attack is to dig control lines ahead of where
the fire is going.
We work with the police and the army to try and evacuate people
and close roads. If it's too late for them to leave, then we'll put out
the call to stay and defend. This is when it's actually safer for people
to prepare their houses and stay inside.
In a worst-case scenario
we would have hundreds of people on the ground, multiple different
agencies involved and multiple aircraft in the skies.
Step five: Mopping up
Kirsten:
A fire is under control when there's a working boundary around it or
we've cut off its head. In other words - when it can't spread any
further.
But even when it's under control there's a long process of mopping up and putting out any lasting fires.
Once
we've tracked around the whole outside of the fire and it can no longer
escape, we come in from the sides and put out any trees that are on
fire. This is generally done with ground crews and machinery.
We
make sure everything around the perimeter edge is cold. In dry
conditions, several days or weeks after a fire, if something is still
smouldering and the wind picks up again then a spark could ignite a
second blaze. So we take this mopping-up process very seriously.
Step six: Aftermath
Kirsten:
Even weeks after a fire has gone cold, we will patrol the area and make
sure it's safe. We'll assess whether to open it back up to the public
and remove any trees that could fall down and hurt people.
Community
rehabilitation is the longest part of the process afterwards. After a
major wildfire, the community could still be feeling its impact years
later. Post-traumatic stress disorder is an issue and the government
here in Australia provides counselling so people can rebuild their lives
and businesses.
As firefighters, we try not to get too
emotional. You see farms and houses go up in flames that you've been
fighting for 10 hours to save. But then you look at an adjacent paddock
or a house that you did manage to prevent from burning and it makes it
all worthwhile.
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