Roundtable Discussions (Virtual)

Esther Ekua Amoako, University for Development Studies, Ghana
Sally Archibald, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
Brigitte N’DRI Epse KONE, Nangui Abrogoua University
Tercia Strydom, Kruger National Park South African National Parks (SANParks)

Fire management in Africa is broad, ranging from indigenous fire management in rural areas to more structured fire management in conservation areas due to the different seasons, ecological needs, vegetation types and land uses. The workshop seeks to share perspectives on general declines in burned areas across the African continent. The workshop will also highlight how media can be utilized in order to inform stakeholders on fire management so that both ecological benefits as well as the hazards of fires are shared amongst the public. Inputs from fire ecologists, researchers, and managers will be compiled into a workshop report.

Bibiana Bilbao, Departamento de Estudios Ambientales, Universidad Simón Bolívar
Dolors Armenteras, Departamento de Biología, Universidad Nacional de Colombia

Under more extreme climate change-induced fire weather and current social governance conditions, wildfire occurrence in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) has become a critical issue, affecting local communities, populations at urban-rural interfaces, firefighters, ecosystems biodiversity and stocks of carbon. Despite costly investment in human resources and high technical deployment, dominant fire suppression policies have not been sufficiently effective to control and suppress severe and extensive wildfires increasing throughout the LAC region, even affecting more vulnerable ecosystems such as primary tropical rainforests and wetlands (e.g. Pantanal), with lower fire risk history. Developing a new vision and capacities for integrated and intersectoral management of wildfires instead of just fighting them requires the inclusion of multiple perspectives and actors and rescuing the knowledge and adaptive practices of local communities that inhabit natural spaces. This roundtable aims to bring together representatives from different sectors of civil and government organisations, academics, local communities, and Indigenous peoples at the local, national, and regional levels to discuss the creation of common spaces and networks to 1) update the state of knowledge about wildfire occurrence and impacts, and 2) identify obstacles and challenges to generate concerted actions for implementing new paradigms of integrated fire management in the LAC region.

Panel Discussions (In-person)

Celia Conde and Xènia Juan, Pau Costa Foundation

Fire is an important natural process in many landscapes. However, the social perception of fire is usually negative. Education can be a powerful tool to change this paradigm through the understating of fire prevention, mitigation, and preparedness, especially in a climate change context. Different studies pointed out fire management as a key competence to be included within the curriculum by following the educational standards. Based on this, different European and international projects aimed to provide children and young students with competencies regarding forests, wildfires, and climate change. It was identified that projects employ different learning and educational methodologies and implementation strategies and perform their follow-up evaluation. The aim of this roundtable is for project representatives briefly explain the goals, outcomes, activities, implementation strategies and impact evaluation of their programs. Sharing experiences not only will allow identifying the strengths and weaknesses of the project, but also to improve and amplify the obtained results. 

Panelists

  • Pablo Souza, Universidad Santiago de Compostela
  • Conceição Colaço, Instituto Superior de Agronomia / Universidade de Lisboa
  • Jordi Vendrell, PCF General Manager
  • Ilana Abrahamson, USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station – Missoula Firelab

Collaborators/Co-authors: Helena Ballart, Pau Costa Foundation; Xènia Juan, Pau Costa Foundation; Núria Prat, Pau Costa Foundation; Finian Joyce, Leitrim County Concil; Míriam Arenas, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya; Israel Rodríguez, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya; Conceição Colaço, Instituto Superior de Agronomia (ISA), University of Lisboa

Moderator: Eduard Plana, Forest Science and Technology Centre of Catalonia (CTFC)

Wildfire is a common phenomenon in many regions across Europe, but the potential for extreme wildfire events is increasing under climate change projections, leading to impending impacts on the society, the economy, and the environment. Under these prospects, the assessment of innovative solutions for wildfire management, including applied knowledge, methods, or technological tools, are crucial to build resilience into European landscapes.

This roundtable will engage representatives of 6 EU-funded projects working on Wildfire Risk Management in a dialogue about the gaps, challenges, and opportunities to cope with the current and future risk situation, as well as the innovative solutions provided by the respective projects. Notably, part of the discussion will be focused on the strategic guidelines to achieve the Green Deal targets for 2030 in terms of expected impacts.

The discussion will be facilitated by Firelogue, the Coordination and Support Action project from the Green Deal call in wildfires, counting on the participation of:

  • DRYADS, FIRE-RES, and SYLVANUS, the three Innovation Actions from the Green Deal call on wildfires aimed at preventing and fighting extreme wildfires with the integration and demonstration of innovative means.
  • Pyrolife, the Marie Curie Action aimed at training programme to prepare the next generation of wildfire scientists.
  • SAFERS, the Research and Innovation Action aimed at developing a decision support system for wildfire management.

Organizer: Rut Domènech, Consorci de Politiques Ambientals de les Terres de l’Ebre (COPATE)

Participants: 

  • Zisoula Ntasiou, Hellenic Fire Service (Greece)
  • Luca Tonarelli, DREAm ITALIA (Italy)
  • Marc Castellnou, Catalan Forest Service (Spain)

Several hot waves, extreme lighting events in remote areas, and accumulation of drought in forests have led to an extreme fire event in Europe in the last fire season. Extinguishing systems had to deal with simultaneous events, some in forest-urban interface and with extreme fire behavior. For the first time fires have been monitored and let it burn policies applied, even fires in Natural parks have been let burn.

Far from asking for more resources, society has responded with an increasingly understanding of the complexity of the problem and is asking for new approaches. Media has stressed the need to return to resilient landscapes, with an active mosaic of farms, shepherds, and forest economy. The focus shifted towards prevention, management, bioeconomy and decrease the depopulation of rural areas.

This momentum requires new approaches to turn the disaster into a step forward and involve society in solving the problem. Conservation, civil protection and urban society are asked to taking into account rural society and management.

Moderator: Gianluca Calvani, Regione Toscana, Italy

Partecipanti / Participants:

  • Silvia Lorenzoni, Comune di Calci, Pisa
  • Enrico Bernardini, Comune di Vicopisano, Pisa
  • Annalaura Vannuccini, ANCI – Associazione Nazionale Comuni Italiani
  • Gabriele Salvadori, CVT – Coordinamento Volontariato Toscano
  • Maurizio Meucci, Presidente Associazione Comunità del Bosco del Monte Pisano

The Region of Tuscany, in collaboration with NFPA (National Fire Protection Association), started a few years ago to set up wildfire resilient communities that are adapted from  the Firewise Communities in the United States. These are initiatives in which citizens are directly involved in the management of prevention and fire mitigation activities, so that everyone becomes fully aware of the level of risk present on their territory, with respect to the ignition and propagation of a forest fire.

Through Firewise people become active participants in the fight against forest fires: around their structures/factories they create and maintain strips with a lower density of vegetation with the aim of reducing the effects of a possible fire, implementing self-protection measures and thus sharing the fire risk.

These communities are strongly incentivised by the regional AIB (Forest Firefighting) organisation to reduce the risk of having to cope with extreme events and out of extinguishing capacity.

The Region of Tuscany has defined guidelines that serve to clarify the ways in which the public, private and voluntary associations can work together to pursue the same aim of prevention and self-protection. The guidelines provide the technical standards to regulate the construction and management of the defensive space around dwellings.

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L’esperienza delle Comunità Firewise in Toscana

Regione Toscana, in collaborazione con NFPA (National Fire Protection Association), ha iniziato da alcuni anni un percorso per la costituzione di Comunità antincendi boschivi che si rifanno alle Firewise Community degli Stati Uniti. Si tratta di iniziative nelle quali i cittadini sono direttamente coinvolti nella gestione delle attività di prevenzione, affinché ciascuno assuma piena consapevolezza del livello di rischio presente sul proprio territorio, rispetto all’innesco e alla propagazione di un incendio forestale.

Attraverso le Firewise le persone diventano parte attiva nel contrasto agli incendi boschivi: intorno alle proprie strutture/fabbricati creano e mantengono fasce a minor densità di vegetazione con l’obiettivo di ridurre gli effetti di un eventuale passaggio del fuoco, realizzando misure di autoprotezione e quindi di condivisione del rischio di incendio.

Queste Comunità sono fortemente incentivate dall’Organizzazione regionale AIB (Antincendio Boschivo) per ridurre il rischio di dover fronteggiare eventi estremi e fuori dalla capacità di spegnimento.

Regione Toscana ha definito delle linee di indirizzo che servono a chiarire le modalità con le quali pubblico, privato ed associazioni di volontariato possono coadiuvarsi per il perseguimento della stessa finalità di prevenzione ed autoprotezione. Le linee di indirizzo, in particolare, prevedono le norme tecniche per regolare la realizzazione e la gestione dello spazio difensivo intorno alle abitazioni.

Roundtable Discussions (In-person)

Teresa M. Deubelli, IIASA, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
Joanne Linnerooth-Bayer, IIASA, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
Eva Preinfalk, IIASA, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis

As the risk of wildfires in wildlands and the Wildland Urban Interface mounts across Europe due to socioeconomic developments, degenerating ecosystems and climate change, so does the financial burden on public and private forest owners, forest infrastructure managers and other wildland stakeholders, possibly reaching beyond their means. Liability issues related to controlled and uncontrolled burns and lack of equitable access to resources add to the equity issues of wildfires. As emphasized by the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030, risk financing and risk transfer, including insurance, offer opportunities for increasing resilience to wildfire risks, for incentivizing measures to reduce risk and address equity concerns. However, evidence suggests unused potential for integrating incentives for risk reduction in risk-sharing mechanisms and a need for equity provisions to make risk-sharing mechanisms more accessible across diverse wildland stakeholder groups. In view of this, this roundtable offers an opportunity to exchange and reflect on options for equitable risk-sharing mechanisms for increasing wildfire risks in Europe. The discussion will focus on introducing equity thinking in the context of wildfire risk management from a financing perspective, and share evidence from applications of different insurance mechanisms for wildfire risks, and discuss incentives for reducing risks and building resilience.

Sean Parks, USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station
Jonathan Coop, Western Colorado University
Camille Stevens-Rumann, Colorado State University
Ellen Whitman, Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service

Increasing wildfire activity across portions of the planet poses profound risks for human communities and ecological systems. Recent fire years in Australia, Europe, North America, and Siberia are characterized not only by expanding area burned but also explosive fire growth. In the western US, for example, several fires grew by >40,000 hectares within a 24-hour period during the 2020 fire season. Extreme fire spread events such as these are poorly understood but disproportionately responsible for wildfire impacts: just the largest 1% of single-day fire spread events account for 20% of annual area burned (in the western US). As extreme fire spread events are linked to warmer and drier conditions, we expect that their frequency will increase under future climate.

In this roundtable discussion, we will lead a discussion on the causes and consequences of extreme fire spread.

We will engage the global fire community in this discussion and will examine extreme fire spread considering both social and ecological factors. Our ultimate goals are to 1) gain insights about how the causes consequences of extreme fire spread vary across ecosystems, fire regimes, and social systems and 2) increase collaboration among fire scientists across globe interested in extreme fire spread.

Eva Preinfalk, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
John Handmer, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)

Devastating fire seasons around the world have shown the far-reaching consequences of wildfires, threatening lives, assets, economic production and ecosystem health. With climate change bringing more droughts and higher temperatures, fires are increasing in frequency and severity. In addition to climatic drivers, settlement patterns, agricultural land-use, forestry practices and implemented risk management strategies are fundamental to determining future wildfire risk. Yet, comprehensive assessments of these socio-economic determinants in the context of wildfires remain scarce.

We identify relevant impact chains affecting three major dimensions of human well-being: economy/livelihoods, health & ecosystems. By accounting for range of possible socio-economic developments and different adaptation policy scenarios, we develop alternative pathways for wildfire vulnerability and adaptation across Europe. We then contrast traditional coping or incremental adaptation actions with more transformative approaches, investigating their effectiveness in reducing wildfire risk across a range of societal and economic futures. Guiding questions for the roundtable discussion include:

  • What are socio-economic drivers of future wildfire risk?
  • How effective is a conventional approach of wildfire management in mitigating the growing risk?
  • What is the scope for more transformative approaches in wildfire risk management?

Carolyn Baldwin, Great Plains Fire Science Exchange and Kansas State University
John Weir, Oklahoma State University
Morgan Treadwell, Texas A&M University

What are the challenges you face in prescribed burning? What can we learn from each other to overcome these challenges? By comparing and contrasting our experiences, we can find solutions through shared knowledge and collaborative problem-solving. The session will begin with brief presentations from 4-6 prescribed burners outlining how they burn in their country, including typical equipment and procedures as well as the social, community, and regulatory aspects of prescribed burning including outreach communication and prescribed burn associations. After the presentations, participants will gather in small groups to discuss how they would approach conducting a prescribed burn on a sample burn unit. How would it be burned? Would it be possible to burn it in your regulatory or social context? What resources would be available? What challenges would be involved? The remainder of the time will be spent in small groups coalesced around self-determined topics of mutual interest.

Eduard Mauri, European Forest Institute
Celia García Feced, Wildfire Management Service of the Spanish Ministry for the Ecological Transition and Demographic Challenge

Mediterranean countries are a worldwide hotspot for wildfires. Lessons learnt there can be applied to other areas under the same climate. In 2011, FAO published the Position Paper on Wildfire Prevention in the Mediterranean; since then, there has been much progress. In March 2022, at the 7th Mediterranean Forest Week, the European Forest Institute and the Spanish Ministry for the Ecological Transition and Demographic Challenge announced an update of the Position Paper and since then, an editorial team has made a first draft with contributions from a group of experts from several Mediterranean countries.

We do not want to miss any recommendation; therefore, we are using this roundtable to expand the group. We wish to collect more input from wildfire experts and forest managers from Mediterranean basin countries, and from other Mediterranean regions worldwide to address the topic with a broader scope.

Participants to this roundtable will receive the current draft of the Position Paper in advance, to assist in preparing their feedback and intervention. During the roundtable, recommendations and proposed actions will be presented and reviewed for update. Participants with a significant contribution will be invited to become co-authors of the updated Position Paper.

2011 Position Paper editon: https://www.fao.org/forestry/49223-06791969d1427714a896b8faeee2aa501.pdf

Robin Verble, Missouri University of Science and Technology
Rachel Granberg, United States Forest Service
Seth Pearson, United States Forest Service
Miranda Ragland, Missouri University of Science and Technology
Jennifer Harrell, Missouri University of Science and Technology

Wildland firefighters have physically and psychologically demanding jobs that can result in social, economic, and health-related stress. Previous studies have examined the physiological and physical effects of a career in wildland fire, but fewer studies have directly analyzed the experiences of wildland firefighters. We surveyed the attitudes, experiences and morale of wildland firefighters, explore factors that can improve recruitment and retention, and summarized broad patterns in their experiences. Our data found that working conditions exacerbated mental health conditions, caused familial and financial strain, and were physically unsafe off the fire line. Respondents reported dissatisfaction with recruitment and hiring processes, insufficient base salaries, poor mental health outcomes, and elevated risks to health and safety. Respondents also reported high importance of training, performance feedback, and work environment. Compounded with other former work on wildland firefighter families and the strains on their lives, this survey yields important results that can inform future policies surrounding federal firefighting workplaces.

The goal of this roundtable discussion is to highlight these results and spur a conversation about current and aspirational working conditions and culture in the wildland firefighting community, specifically addressing how both fire and political leaders can shape the future of the field. Given current efforts to redefine federal policies and job status in the United States for wildland firefighters, this is a timely and relevant topic.

Judith A. Kirschner, European University Cyprus
Davide Ascoli, University of Turin
Julian Clark, University of Birmingham
Silvia Calvani, University of Florence
George Boustras, European University Cyprus
Peter Moore, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

Anthropogenic wildfires in the Mediterranean are a fundamental ecological process, but intensifying fire regimes and a growing exposure result in a high risk to the coupled human and natural system. To manage the resulting disaster risk, a paradigm shift is needed from the current emphasis on short-term emergency response, towards a proactive approach focused on long-term prevention through integrated risk management. Here, we empirically investigate the case of Italy as an example of a Mediterranean country with a high wildfire risk, and a long tradition of wildfire occurrence and management. Our case is particularly relevant as a recently adopted law (155/2021) appears to be creating a strongly unbalanced focus on the emergency response approach. We use a semi-structured email-survey to illustrate the governance arrangement driving current fire management approaches. Focusing on the national level and regional level (represented through seven selected regions across Italy), we examine (dis)satisfaction with the status quo in wildfire management as perceived by diverse stakeholder groups. We then focus on five governance dimensions more closely: i) formal institutions, ii) actor participation, iii) collaboration and coproduction across multiple levels, scales, and networks, iv) path dependencies and local place-based dynamics, and v) management strategies fostering adaptation to and anticipation of changing wildfire regimes. Results indicate provide insights where interests, power, responsibility, and accountability for decisions on wildfire risk management are shared between stakeholders and across levels. We conclude with practical suggestions for policymakers and fire practitioners, with the goal to diversify and integrate management strategies for wildfire risk in a warming world.

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