No mention here of using prison labour or sending in the troops.
With a stunning 7 million acres burned so far, the U.S. wildfire situation is looking dire
With a stunning 7 million acres burned so far, the U.S. wildfire situation is looking dire
18
August, 2015
Wildfires
are exploding across the western United States, overstretching
resources and, in some states, resulting in tragic consequences.
Some 30,000
firefighters and
additional support staff are now fighting fires across the
United States — the biggest number mobilized in 15 years,
according to the U.S. Forest Service. And it’s still not
enough.
Two
hundred members of the military are being called up to help further —
they will be trained and deployed within just a few days — as
are Canadian
firefighting forces.
There’s even some
talk of
potentially needing to draw on resources from Australia and New
Zealand, which has been done
before in
a pinch.
And
no wonder: Five states are now battling more than 1o large wildfires
— California is contending with 16, Idaho 21, Montana 14, Oregon 11
and Washington 17. Most terrifying, perhaps, is the Soda
Fire,
which has scorched 283,686 acres in Idaho, burning up
ranches, killing
wild horses,
even generating an alarming fire
whirl recently.
The
total acres burned so far in 2015 is now a staggering 7.1
million, with currently burning fires accounting for over 1 million
of that total. “This is the earliest the number of national acres
burned has been more than 7 million in the past 20 years,” notes the
National Interagency Coordination Center — although the center
acknowledges that 5 million of those acres burned in Alaska earlier
this year.
There
is no year, in the past
10,
in which year-to-date wildfire acres burned were as high as they are
now. In fact, based on records provided
by the National Interagency Fire Center, only nine years since 1960
have seen more acres burned in total than
2015 has as of August 18. The most acres burned in any year on record
is 9,873,745, in 2006.
The
United States is at wildfire preparedness Level 5 — the highest —
and has been since Aug. 13.
What
has been particularly alarming in the past day or so is developments
in Montana
and Idaho,
battling 35 large fires between them, including the gargantuan Soda
Fire. In these states and in the Pacific Northwest, fires are being
started by thunderstorms that are delivering lightning strikes
without much rain.
A weekend
video showing
deputy incident commander Rob Allen discussing fires in the Chelan
area of Washington State gives a sense of what firefighting planners
are currently facing. As Allen put it:
Competition for resources right now is extremely tight. As of yesterday there was outstanding orders for crews of 160 crews. They’re still looking for, there are no more shower units, there are no more catering units. A lot of the stuff we rely on to come in and give us a hand is being used….The truth of the matter right now is that between Oregon, Washington, Northern California, Idaho got very busy, Nevada’s busy, Colorado’s busy, there’s just a real strain in all the resources we have right now.
And
that was several days ago — the situation appeared to have
heightened even further Tuesday.
The
gigantic convulsion of fire activity makes a report released two
weeks ago, by the U.S. Forest Service, seem prescient. The
agency sounded
the alarm about
rising wildfire costs, saying that fighting fires will consume more
than 50 percent of its budget this year and could be up to two thirds
of it by the year 2025, based on current trends.
According
to the Forest Service, the U.S. spends $ 100 million per week when it
is at wildfire preparedness level 5, as it is now.
“We
are at a tipping point. Congress must change the way it pays for
wildfires by providing a fiscally responsible way to treat
catastrophic wildfires more like the natural disasters that they are,
end fire transfers, partially replenish our capacity to restore
resilient forests, and protect lives and property against future
fires.”
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