HomeMy WebLinkAbout02-06-21 Public Comment - P. Simmons - Trees in Hyalite Water ShedFrom: Patricia Simmons
To: Agenda
Subject: Critique of The West Is Burning Documentary
Date: Saturday, February 6, 2021 3:30:18 PM
Since the City is trying to remove trees in the Hyalite water shed, you should read this article
about doing this to learn the real truth. Thanks, Pat Simmons
Sent from my iPhone
Pat Simmons
From: The Wildlife News <donotreply@wordpress.com>
Date: February 5, 2021 at 9:52:19 PM MST
To: psimmons100@gmail.com
Subject: [New post] Critique of The West Is Burning
Documentary
New post on The Wildlife News
Critique of The West Is
Burning Documentary
by George Wuerthner
The wind-driven pattern of fire in the 1988 Yellowstone fires.
Photo George Wuerthner
A new documentary titled The West Is Burning continues to
promote a flawed narrative that large blazes are a
consequence of "fire suppression" and "fuel build-up."
Starting from this perspective, it promotes policies like thinning
the forest and prescribed burning to counter the large blazes
occurring across the West.
https://www.westisburning.org/watch
1. Fire suppression has created unnatural fuel build up in all
plant communities.
2. Fuel reductions are required to “restore” our forests to
some presumed “historical” condition.
3. That such fuel reductions are the way to reduce fire
impacts on homes and communities.
While all the above are questionable assertions, the
documentary gives little emphasis to reducing the fire
susceptibility of homes to wildfire, which should be the
dominant paradigm driving public policy.
Another problem is that except for Greg Aplet of the
Wilderness Society, none of the featured speakers in the film
have any special background in fire ecology. Interviewees
include forestry professor Jerry Franklin, WELC lawyer Susan
Jane Brown; Nick Goulette, a community organizer; Shirlee
Zane, a California county Supervisor; and Mark Webb, a
former judge, and promoter of mills in John Day, Oregon. All
these people, to one degree or another, are advocates of
thinning the forest.
Greg Aplet comes to the closest to explaining the relationship
of climate to the larger fires and how people building in the
Wildlands Urban Interface are part of the problem.
Nevertheless, he still holds on to the idea that fuels are the
problem.
There are no interviews with anyone who might disagree with
the dominant narrative that fire suppression and fuel build-up
are the main reason for large blazes in California, Oregon, and
elsewhere.
The documentary starts out with the false assertion that the
West’s forests are too dense, overgrown, and more
flammable, primarily due to fire suppression. It does not
acknowledge that many scientists dispute this narrative.
And throughout the film, the people interviewed, and the
narrator uses pejorative terms like “catastrophic” to describe
these blazes insinuating just because a fire is large, that
somehow it is "destructive" and outside of historical
conditions.
Yet from an ecological perspective and a historical
perspective, none of the above assertions are accurate.
If one reviews past wildfires from a historical perspective, long
before there was anyone to practice "fire suppression," large
wildfires were the norm. In the 1700s, there was a summer in
Washington where over 10 million acres burned, and the 1910
Big Blow Up in Idaho/Montana charred 3-3.5 million acres in
two days. So it is simply inaccurate to suggest, as the movie
does, that a blaze of even 750,000 acres is somehow outside
of the historical condition. Large fires are infrequent but not
abnormal anymore than category 7 or 8 earthquakes is
abnormal just because most quakes are under a category 3
on the Richter scale.
Large wildfires had always tracked significant climate/weather
change, including long before anyone suppressed fires.
Extreme drought equals extreme fire weather. The film
acknowledges that climate change has extended the fire
season but fails to connect that extreme climate drives large
blazes we are witnessing today. The primary reason for large
fires is not fire suppression; instead, climate change enhances
fire spread.
The factors that create large blazes are high temps, low
humidity, drought, and high winds. If you have these
ingredients with an ignition, you get an uncontrollable wildfire
until the weather changes. If you don’t have these factors, you
don’t get a big blaze, and any ignition is easy to suppress.
Is it more than a coincidence that as we have had some of the
warmest and driest summers in recent history that we also
have some of the largest fires in recent history? Not if you
study Paleo fire ecology.
There is a direct correlation between major drought periods
and large blazes. The West is experiencing some of the most
severe droughts, record temperatures, and higher winds than
in the past. And not surprisingly, we see some of the most
severe fires.
This gets back to a critical point ignored by the documentary.
If you go back in time, we find that climate always controls fire
size and severity. There were massive fires that burned
across the Sierra Nevada during the Medieval Warm Spell.
And during the Little Ice Age, when temperatures were cooler
and moister, very few large fires occurred.
Another factor that is no acknowledged directly is that many
forest types have very long fire-free intervals regardless of
aggressive “fire suppression.” The movie treats all plant
communities as if they follow the same fire regime. Old-growth
Douglas fir forests on the western slope of the Oregon
Cascades or chaparral about Santa Rosa are not the same
fire regime as, say, a ponderosa pine dominate forest in
eastern Oregon.
To the degree that fire suppression may have influenced some
forest types, primarily the lower elevation drier ponderosa pine
and mixed conifer forests, it does not apply to most plant
communities across the West.
Old-growth douglas fir forests naturally tends to be fire-free for
centuries. Photo George Wuerthner
The large blazes that charred the old-growth Douglas fir
forests on the western slope of the Oregon Cascades
mentioned in the film naturally have fire-free intervals of 300-
600 years or more. The dense shade and overall cooler
temperatures in these forests inhibit fire spread.
The higher subalpine fir forests throughout the West and other
plant community types like aspen, juniper, and sagebrush all
experience long fire-free periods without significant fires.
During these long periods without extensive fires, fuels
accumulate, but this is entirely within the natural fire regime
and not a consequence of "fire suppression."
Burn mosaic typical of larger fires. Photo George Wuerthner
Another scientific fact overlooked by the documentary is that
most wildfires, particularly larger fires, have a great deal of
heterogeneity in burn severity. In most larger blazes, the bulk
of the acreage within the fire perimeter burns at low to medium
severity and creates a mosaic patchwork that makes greater
ecological diversity.
For all these reasons, the “solution” advocated in the
documentary of doing prescribed burns and thinning doesn't'
work. When there is severe fire weather, these "active
management" proposals fail to influence fire behavior most of
the time.
A further nuance is that in most instances where significant
home losses occur, the fires never directly touched the
homes. A close observer would note that when the filmmakers
panned the housing losses in Santa Rosa, green trees
surrounded the foundations of burnt-out homes. The fire never
reached the community, but embers lofted by high winds did.
Under such extreme fire weather, the influence of prescribed
burning and thinning is minimal. Wind drives fire through, over,
and around any obstacle like a prescribed burn or thinned
forest patch.
One of the things that all of the people interviewed in the
movie appear to misunderstand is that fire "suppression" to
the degree it was successful only put out the small fires
burning under less than extreme fire weather conditions. Most
fires burning under less than extreme fire weather conditions
are 1-5 acres in size.
The influence of fire suppression does apply to most plant
communities in the West, including the majority of areas
burned in recent years. For example, in California, a
substantial acre of the larger fires were in chaparral, which
naturally has longer fire-free intervals. When it burns, they
tend to be at high severity.
Two points that the above fact signifies. First, it would take
tens of thousands of small blazes to reduce any significant
amount of fuel across the landscape.
Second, large extreme weather-driven fires are the only fires
we want to control since they pose the greatest threat to
communities. Still, by definition, blazes burning under these
conditions are impossible to suppress.
While the film producers go out of their way to suggest that
vegetation removal by thinning or prescribed burning is the
way to preclude large fires, they don’t acknowledge that there
is much debate within the scientific community about the
overall effectiveness of this strategy. We have numerous
examples of the failure of prescribed burning, thinning, and
other fuel reductions to preclude or even slow large fires
burning under extreme fire weather.
The documentary featured one snippet of a representative
from a Watershed Center showing a map and declaring how a
prescribed burn “appeared” to stop a fire. Maybe it did. But I
am willing to bet the blaze was not burning under extreme fire
weather conditions, or the weather may have changed just as
it reached the prescribed burn. The wind may have died down.
The humidity may have risen. The fire may have got the
prescribed burn in the middle of the night when temperatures
are cooler.
In many cases, the presumed success at stopping a fire
because of vegetation and fuel reduction projects can be
explained by other factors. One needs to look closely at such
claims. Even if, in this example, prescribed burning did halt the
fire's progress, the consensus of scientists who have looked at
this issue is that such tactics do not work most of the time.
“The belief people have is that somehow or another we can
thin our way to low-intensity fire that will be easy to suppress,
easy to contain, easy to control. Nothing could be further from
the truth,” said Jack Cohen, a retired U.S. Forest Service
scientist who pioneered research on how homes catch fire.
More than 200 preeminent scientists signed a letter to
Congress to find that proposed solutions to wildfire like
thinning forests are ineffective and short-lived.
https://www.forestlegacies.org/images/scientist-
letters/scientist-letter-wildfire-signers-2018-08-27_1.pdf
To quote from the scientists’ letter: “Thinning is most often
proposed to reduce fire risk and lower fire intensity…However,
as the climate changes, most of our fires will occur during
extreme fire-weather (high winds and temperatures, low
humidity, low vegetation moisture). These fires, like the ones
burning in the West this summer, will affect large landscapes,
regardless of thinning, and, in some cases, burn hundreds or
thousands of acres in just a few days.”
Another research paper reached similar conclusions:
"Mechanical fuels treatments on US federal lands over the last
15 y (2001–2015) totaled almost 7 million ha, but the annual
area burned has continued to set records. Regionally, the area
treated has little relationship to trends in the area burned,
which is influenced primarily by patterns of drought and
warming."
A third study by fire ecologists at the Forest Service’s fire lab
suggests: “Extreme environmental conditions. .overwhelmed
most fuel treatment effects. . . This included almost all
treatment methods including prescribed burning and thinning. .
.. Suppression efforts had little benefit from fuel modifications.”
Another problem with the “active forest management” as a
solution to large fires is that one can’t predict where a fire will
occur. And most wildfires never encounter a fuel reduction
project during the period of time when they might assist fire-
fighters.
The Camp Fire burned most of the town of Paradise,
California despite numerous fuel reductions. Photo George
Wuerthner
There are many anecdotal examples of the failure of "active
forest management" to stop large blazes. The Camp Fire,
which destroyed 95% of the homes in Paradise, California, in
2018, was driven by high winds through clearcuts, previous
burns, fuel treatments, and other fuel reductions. None of
these had any effect on slowing the fire.
Furthermore, there is scientific evidence that “forest
management” can exacerbate fire severity. For instance,
thinning a forest can result in drier fuel conditions and greater
wind penetration. One study that looked at 1500 fires across
the West in dry pine and mixed conifer forests found that the
highest severity blazes were in places with "active
management," meaning thinning, logging, and so forth. While
the least severe fires were in protected landscapes like parks
and wilderness areas, which had more fuel, but burned at
lower severity than areas under active forest management.
Chainsaws will not slow the wind; they will accelerate the wind
penetration in the forest and exacerbate fire spread.
A careful viewer will notice that in numerous parts of the
documentary, you see homes burnt to the ground with green
trees in the background. This indicates that the wind-driven
embers pass over forests to ignite homes.
Remains of home surrounded by green forest, Paradise
California. Photo George Wuerthner
This is why treating the home, not the forest, is the only
reasonable solution.
The movie goes out of its way to feature a number of
conservation groups that have bought into the idea of thinning
the forest to “restore” it. They argue that small trees must be
removed to retain the larger trees in the name of forest health.
But many forest pathogens focus on different species and
different size trees.
For example, bark beetles often attack the largest trees in a
stand. If all the small trees are removed, In "restoring" the
forest, the forest's resilience is reduced. You need all size
trees and species as a means of hedge betting.
The climate that produced the forest structure that thinning
proponents are trying to emulate no longer exists. The climate
that is driving forest structure today is significantly warmer and
more drought-prone than the conditions that created the forest
stands that exist today.
Chainsaw medicine will not recreate a "healthy forest
ecosystem." We need bark beetles, wildfire, drought, and
other natural processes to select the best-adapted trees to the
conditions that prevail today and likely into the future.
Removal of a significant amount of the trees may dimmish the
forest's genetic diversity, and thus its ability to adapt to
changing climate conditions.
Increasingly people recognize that logging won’t preclude
large blazes. https://www.opb.org/article/2020/10/31/logging-
wildfire-forest-management/
Unfortunately, The West Is Burning continues to promote the
out of date paradigm that logging and other management can
preclude large blazes.
The best way to cope with the West's changing fire regimes is
to build resistance into human communities, not attempt to
modify the forest ecosystem. Strategic thinning and prescribed
may have a role in the immediate area around a town, but the
emphasis should be on reducing homes' flammability. Much
could be done to homes to reduce the vulnerability to wildfire,
which should be the priority instead of the flawed emphasis on
forest management.
The Burning of the West is another documentary that presents
simplistic solutions that have not been effective because it
fails to appreciate the real problem—human-caused climate
change. Until we effectively address climate warming and
associated changes in fire weather and fire seasons, the
reliance on forest management will continue to be a sideshow
that will not make our communities safer or reduce the costs
of fire suppression efforts.
George Wuerthner | February 5, 2021 at 9:51 pm | Tags: Santa
Rosa, The West Is Burning | URL: https://wp.me/p1Bj0H-9kj
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