Doomed Planet

Another Opportunity to Get Lost in the Woods

In mid-2000, Victorian foresters were among Australia’s first contingent of forest fire specialists sent to the US to help fight several huge wildfires. Upon returning, they regaled bemused stay-at-home colleagues with stories of so-called ‘campaign fires’ of monstrous size and duration. Apparently, despite huge industrial-scale fire suppression efforts featuring large fleets of aerial water-bombers, controlling large US wildfires was typically slow and often thwarted by over-zealous fire-fighter safety protocols.

At the time, Australia’s foresters collectively shook their heads in amazement and basked in the presumed superiority that our whatever-it-takes determination to quickly contain bushfires would surely save us from this fraught US path. But unfortunately, just 20 years later, huge US-style ‘campaign fires’ have become a regular feature of south-eastern Australian summers and are being popularly portrayed as irrefutable evidence of a ‘new normal’ under rampant climate change. 

Twenty years ago, climate change was barely on the radar as the purported cause of huge US forest fires. Instead, internationally acclaimed US wildfire analyst Stephen Pyne was attributing them to the evolution of an aircraft-based ‘paramilitary emergency response culture’ that was displacing the traditional wildfire mitigation approach of balancing off-season land management with in-season fire suppression. In contrast to the cost-effectiveness of the traditional approach, the shift to an approach dominated by in-season emergency response, based around the use of very expensive water-bombing aircraft, was massively increasing the costs of dealing with US wildfires.

Pyne argued that the domination of aircraft-based emergency response had arisen because of a need to protect burgeoning US suburbs, towns and other assets that were increasingly abutting flammable forests. But while this justified the approach, he contended that it was failing to improve wildfire outcomes because:

1/ it is focused on treating the symptoms rather than addressing factors that underpin fire risk;

2/ massive expenditure on aircraft reduces the budgetary resources for off-season fire mitigation activities such as fuel hazard reduction and maintaining forest access that is integral to quickly containing fires while they are small;

3/ aerial water-bombing, while brilliant at saving houses and other community assets, is relatively ineffective in controlling most forest fires; and

4/ an over-reliance on aerial water-bombing was partly displacing ground-based fire-fighting which, although carrying a higher degree of fire-fighter risk, is integral to containing wildfires.

According to Pyne, these consequences of a dominant focus on aircraft-based emergency response foster a self-sustaining cycle of massive wildfires which is regularly reinforced as each big fire increases community and political demands to further expand the fleet of fire-fighting aircraft. Recent research in Mediterranean countries, refers to this phenomenon as the ‘fire-fighting trap’ because nowhere in the world has increasing the numbers of fire-fighting aircraft ever reduced the incidence and extent of large forest fires.

As Australian forest fire management has followed the US example, the concerns identified by Pyne are now also applicable to the SE Australian context. That the Morrison Government has become ensnared in this ‘fire-fighting trap’ is exemplified by its recent commitment of a further $20 million to lease four very large air tankers from North America for the duration of the 2019-20 fire season – a commitment made under the pressure of media-driven community and political demands to do more under a supposedly ‘new normal’ of regular climate-driven bushfire catastrophes.

Unfortunately, the public and political focus on climate change as the primary reason for this season’s bushfires is largely obscuring far more obvious explanations for their occurrence. Indeed, it could well derail the serious examination of state-controlled land and fire management that is necessary to start rebuilding systems to cope with expected longer and drier fire seasons.

The answers as to why southern and eastern Australia are more frequently experiencing larger bushfires are largely already known from the many formal public inquiries, reviews and a royal commission that have examined large, damaging bushfires and their management since 2003. However, the public narrative associated with the 2019-20 bushfires has largely seized on just one factor universally noted by these past investigations – inadequate levels of land management – as an alternative to the ‘climate change equals bigger bushfires’ rhetoric.

In reality, there is a complex tangle of factors that explains the 2019-20 fires, with climate change only one influence. Land management (mostly encompassing fuel-hazard reduction and maintaining forest access) is undoubtedly a key factor. But arguably of equal importance is how forest fires are now being fought in an era dominated by aircraft-based emergency response. After all, the benefit of restoring land management back to, and perhaps beyond, former levels will be largely wasted if the fire-fighting system is incapable of taking advantage of the increased opportunities for bushfire control created by lower fuel loads.

To date, the public commentary surrounding the 2019-20 bushfires has not even considered the effectiveness of current forest fire-fighting strategies, protocols and practices being employed by government land management agencies which are responsible for large forest fires burning on public lands. As any questioning of current forest fire-fighting must by necessity be rooted in comparisons with the past, it can be easily dismissed by superficial presumptions that today’s changed climate has created unprecedented difficulties for fire-fighting that invalidates the relevance of any better bushfire outcomes achieved in the past.

However, at least in Victoria, the presumption that the 2019-20 fire season has provided hitherto unprecedented difficulties for forest fire-fighters, is challenged by an examination of the 1982-83 fire season. While it has historically been defined by a single day – February 16, 1983 (‘Ash Wednesday’) on which 47 people died (plus a further 28 in South Australia) – the 1982-83 season was long and arduous, extending from the first fire recorded in August through to mid-March.

Like the current fire season, the 1982-83 season was underpinned by severe drought. According to the 1984 report of Victoria’s Bushfire Review Committee, the severity of the drought was reflected in the fact that the 10 months prior to January 1983 represented the driest period on record for most of Victoria, with water storages in many rural areas virtually depleted. In East Gippsland, only 1944 and 1979 had recorded lower rainfall. Due to the dryness of the landscape, seasonal fire restrictions were imposed up to two months earlier than usual.

The season’s first major forest fires occurred in November 1982 on what was the state’s earliest declared day of Total Fire Ban for 40 years. In January and March 1983, two separate fires each burned over 100,000 hectares of forest near Cann River in East Gippsland. On Ash Wednesday itself, the fire danger conditions exceeded those of ‘Black Saturday’ (2009), and anything experienced during this current fire season. Late in the season, during a period straddling the last week of February and the first week of March, dry lightning ignited 95 forest fires which were mostly quickly controlled – the largest burning just 3,300 hectares in the Grampians.

Given where fires occurred in East Gippsland, the 1982-83 season has some parallels with the current 2019-20 season, and those who fought them 37 years ago reported similarly intense fire behaviour with attendant difficulty in containing fires and conducting back burns.  Based on the similarity of the conditions experienced then and now, there appears to be no reason why the bushfire outcomes achieved in East Gippsland in 1982-83 cannot be a baseline for comparison with the current fire-fighting outcomes.

Concerns about forest fire-fighting strategies, protocols and practices have been building since 2003, when questionable tactics were employed in some Victorian and NSW national parks. These have grown stronger in recent years due to publicly documented investigations into large fires at Harrietville (2013), Wye River (2015) and Geeveston (2019) in which inexplicably missed opportunities to control small, easily accessible lightning strikes enabled them to grow into large and damaging conflagrations. Collectively these three fires burnt around 120,000 hectares when they should have burnt perhaps 20 hectares or less.

Amongst the 2019-20 fires, there are already whisperings of small fires growing large and uncontrollable due to avoidable human factors such as lack of attention, urgency, or experience; as well as fire-fighting tactics being diluted by adherence to the disturbance-averse national parks management philosophy. In NSW, allegations that national parks fire-fighters gave insufficient attention to a small fire are at the heart of a class legal action by local farmers whose properties were subsequently burnt when the fire escaped and grew to uncontrollable proportions.

See also: Bushfires and Climate Change, a Fanciful Link

Particularly in Victoria’s East Gippsland, it is staggering to consider how much of the massive burnt area could have been spared given that four lightning strikes ignited on 21 November were unable to be contained despite fire-fighting being favoured by five weeks of mostly mild or benign weather before blow-up conditions arose on 30 December. Until there is a rational explanation for this, older experienced forest fire practitioners will continue to regard this as incomprehensible.

Overall, in the 1982-83 season, Victoria’s then Forests Commission attended 878 fires which burnt 486,000 hectares across the state. This is dwarfed by the extent of the 2019-20 fires which have already burnt over 1.4 million hectares in Victoria before the season has even finished.

To make some sense of this, the far greater area burnt during this current season needs to be considered in the light of several disparities in fire-fighting and preparedness compared to the 1982-83 season.

Firstly, the current fires were fought around far greater use of aerial water-bombing (ie. a current national fleet of 144 planes were drawn upon, versus only seven planes contracted for fire-fighting in Victoria during 1982-83), and yet it did little to contain the fire spread.

Secondly, there are now far fewer experienced timber industry contractors and machinery operators in Victoria compared to the past (ie. about 25 – 30 now, versus 133 in 1982-83) which has reduced the current capability of ground-based fire-fighting.

Thirdly, in the five years prior to the 1982-83 season, ~1.3 million hectares of forest was fuel reduced and therefore able to assist bushfire control, whereas in the five years prior to the current 2019-20 season only about half as much (~690,000 hectares) had been fuel reduced.

 

The first two disparities add weight to the contention that ground-based fire-fighting is far more important than aerial water-bombing in containing the spread of forest fires, and magnifies additional concerns about an apparent decline in traditional ground-based techniques such as hand-trailing and active night-time fire-fighting. The third disparity supports the contention that more fuel reduction plays an important role in mitigating bushfire spread by facilitating easier control.

In Victoria, the relative success of fire-fighting in the 1982-83 fire season, despite its comparative lack of today’s high technology fire-fighting advances, primarily reflects a stronger land management organisational structure and culture. Compared to today, higher levels of experience and local knowledge meant that fire-fighters could take calculated risks free from the hinderance of today’s risk aversion occupational health and safety climate. This translated into greater success in containing fires quickly when they were small, thereby sparing the landscape from much of the severe fire that more regularly impacts it these days.

Geoffrey Luck: A Counterview of Aerial Firefighting

Drawing upon the successes of the past, the upcoming Royal Commission into the 2019-20 bushfires should be asking just how committed are today’s state governments to dealing with the bushfire threat when:

# they elevate advice from eco-activist groups and academic ecologists – neither group with any practical fire management experience – above the advice of forest fire management practitioners and bushfire science specialists?

# they consequently lack enthusiasm for fuel reduction and are prone to using national park declarations as a political mechanism to close the timber industries that have always been integral to ground-based forest fire-fighting through provision of equipment and experienced bush operators?

# they do not adequately resource land management agencies to maintain numbers of field officer engaged in active forest management?

# their land management agencies have centralised organisational structures that micro-manage fire from cities or large regional centres remote from the field, thereby fostering a decline of local bush and fire knowledge and, consequently, informed on-the-spot decision making?

# their land management agencies no longer insist on fire-fighting as a condition of employment and there are no restrictions on key personnel taking annual leave during the fire season?

# they are obsessed with eliminating personal risks to fire-fighters to the point where safety protocols can restrict the capacity to quickly contain fires while they are small, thereby counter-productively allowing more fires to grow larger with exponentially increased risks to fire-fighters and the broader community?

While there is a real danger that the upcoming Royal Commission will be overwhelmed by climate change concerns, the past shows that the answers to the bushfire problem are primarily rooted in human factors that determine the effectiveness of land and fire management in enabling quick control of fires while they are small. Unless we learn from the past when fire-fighting was primarily ground-based, more initially aggressive, and consequently more effective; the Australian landscape will be doomed to regular repeats of what has occurred this season.

Mark Poynter is a retired forester with 40 years of experience. His second book,Going Green: Forests, Fire and a Flawed Conservation Culture was published by Connor Court in July 2018, and can be purchased via the link above

References:

Morgan, G. et al (2020), Prescribed burning in south-eastern Australia: history and future directions, manuscript accepted for publication in March 2020 edition of Australian Forestry.

Moriera, F. et al (2020), Wildfire management in Mediterranean-type regions: paradigm change needed, Environmental Research Letters, 15: 011001 (January 2020).

Parliament of Victoria, Report of the Bushfire Review Committee on bushfire disaster preparedness and response in Victoria, Australia, following the Ash Wednesday fires of 16 February 1983, April 1984.

Pyne, S., The Burning Bush – A fire history of Australia, University of Washington Press, 1991

Pyne, S., The Still Burning Bush, Scribe Publications, 2006

Rawson, R., Billing, P. and Duncan, S. (1983), The 1982-83 forest fires in Victoria, Australian Forestry, 46(3) 162-173 (1983).

Ryan, M. and Runnalls, R. (2015), Does timber harvesting in natural forests have any influence on fire management at the landscape level? Paper presented to the Biannual Conference of the Institute of Foresters of Australia, 2015. 

*Williams, J., The Mega-fire Reality: Re-directing Protection Strategies in Fire-prone Ecosystems, Key Note address to the Bushfire CRC Forum, Are big fires inevitable? Canberra, 27th February 2007.

*Williams, J. (2013), Exploring the onset of high-impact mega-fires through a forest land management prism, Forest Ecology and Management, Volume 294: 4 – 10, April 2013.

*Note: Jerry Williams is a retired former National Director of Fire & Aviation Management, United States Forest Service.

8 thoughts on “Another Opportunity to Get Lost in the Woods

  • Ian MacDougall says:

    A very good article. Well done.

  • tbeath says:

    Thanks Mark, excellent article. The 1970’s seems to have been the last decade in NSW when active management was widespread. Then National Parks were being declared willy-nilly in NSW for often extremely dubious reasons, but no funds or resources were made available to manage this mad rush.
    In October 1980 I was greeted with six fires in my district, mainly lighting strikes. Even though one in particular was in a large national park, they had no local resources. After considerable badgering, they sent me two men in a Falcon ute with rakehoes and knapsack spray units. Had our land-based fast attack crews not got in and stopped that fire, I threatened to run my two D8’s around the large unmanaged expanse and Blackburn it. Fortunately, it didn’t have to come to that, but is was a vivid demonstration of how under-resourced these large tracts of land are. The media delights in the video clips of the big planes swooping in, but they are not as effective as people then assume.

  • tbeath says:

    My typing is clumsy, in above comment I meant back-burn, not “Blackburn”. Also, the Park area in total where the fire was partly located was over 11,000 ha I recall. The Vic FC also helped my ground-based fire team with some loads of Phoscheck from small Ag aircraft

  • ianl says:

    https://climate.anu.edu.au/about/people/academics/professor-andrew-macintosh

    “Professor Andrew Macintosh is currently the Chair of the Australian Emissions Reduction Assurance Committee, member of the Australian Government’s Emissions Reduction Fund Expert Reference Group, member of the National Greenhouse Gas Inventory User Reference Group. Previously the Chair of the Domestic Offsets Integrity Committee, Associate Member of the Australian Climate Change Authority. Was Deputy Director of The Australia Institute, environmental advisor to the Australian Democrats, even wrote a paper with the infamous Clive Hamilton titled ”Taming the Panda: The relationship between WWF Australia and the Howard Government”

    Macintosh is one of the three commissioners appointed by Morrison. The shape of the RC outcome is set and is just as predicted. We most certainly get the government we deserve.

  • Geoffrey Luck says:

    Unfortunately, this historical survey serves no purpose beyond perpetrating the pretence that a return to forestry practices of the past constitute a relevant approach to bushfire fighting today. The errors and false assumptions ridicule the conclusions. “…an era dominated by aircraft-based emergency response” is a statement so patently untrue that it sets fire to the rest of the article. If the author took the trouble to look at the NAFC’s chart of the 143 aircraft chartered for this fire season, he would see how many were spotting, communications or transport aircraft that played no direct role in firefighting. The rest included light helicopters carrying “Bambi” buckets of 1000 to 4000 litres. There were only 15 aircraft capable of dropping high volumes of retardant or water, plus the additional four aircraft funded by the Commonwealth which arrived so late they contributed little. But the principal issue is that these aircraft were deployed at the discretion (one could almost say, whim) of the RFServices, which historically have resented their contributions and deploy them to supplement their ground-based activities. As we have seen, the mega-fires this season completely overwhelmed humans on the ground, yet the big water-bombers were used to lay down retardant to flank fires in the scrub, not protect lives and property. When one WAS used, (the NSW Boeing 737) to hit a fire in suburban bush in Sydney, it quickly stopped the fire and saved the street of houses opposite. Yes, there have been fires as dangerous before; no, climate change has nothing to do with the bushfire emergency. But until the community ceases pretending that forestry management and hazard reduction (worthy though they are) are the answer to preventing future conflagrations, and designing a modern fast-response operations based on appropriate aircraft types and adequate central funding, the fires and the losses, and the inquiries will go on and on and on.

  • Davidovich says:

    US firefighting expert Stephen Pyne, obviously from the intelligent branch of the Pyne clan, makes good sense with his reasoning as to why American wildfires are not being adequately managed and his points are equally applicable in Australia. Aerial water-bombing undoubtedly has a role but, as the author notes, it is only one part of a number of actions needed to lessen the adverse outcomes from bushfires which will always be part of Australian life.

  • Ian MacDougall says:

    Geoffrey Luck:
    “Yes, there have been fires as dangerous before; no, climate change has nothing to do with the bushfire emergency.”
    Sorry, but one cannot prove a negative.
    Mainstream science predicts more extreme weather events as a result of increasing the atmospheric CO2 load.
    Bushfires fit in with that.

  • Bernie Masters says:

    Geoffrey Luck: Please allow me to defend Mark’s anti-aircraft views based upon my experiences here in WA. We’ve had 2 or 3 serious fires this summer – fortunately, none as serious as those in SA and the eastern states – yet the bulk of the TV news coverage of WA’s firefighting efforts have focused on helicopters and tankers dropping water onto houses and fires. This has created the false impression in the public mind that aerial firefighting is highly effective at putting out fires (which is untrue) as well as saving houses from fires (which is true). In response, the WA govt has committed more money to aerial firefighting which reduces the amount of money available for on-ground resources.
    So, while the statistics you quote about the number of aerial appliances is undoubtedly true, the public perception is exactly as Mark describes in his article, forcing state and federal govts to respond inappropriately to this summer’s fires.

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