Lethbridge Herald

Wildfire prevention studied

SCHOOLS, RING ROADS AND PARKING LOTS CAN HELP PREVENT SPREAD OF WILDFIRES

- Bill Graveland THE CANADIAN PRESS — CALGARY

AUniversit­y of Calgary study says there need to be more wide, open spaces to prevent catastroph­ic wildfires like the one that devastated the city of Fort McMurray in northeaste­rn Alberta two years ago.

Researcher­s from the university’s Schulich School of Engineerin­g used high spatial resolution satellite images to study the two costliest fires in Alberta history: the one in Fort McMurray and the 2011 fire in Slave Lake. The aim was to determine how civic design and planning helped fuel or prevent the spread of the fires.

The team found destructio­n of many of the buildings could have been predicted based on the nearness of trees and vegetation to residentia­l neighbourh­oods.

“We checked the areas and we found that within the minimum 10-metre boundary, there was forested area. Depending on the density of the forest, 30 metres or even 50 metres are considered dangerous,” said Quazi Hassan, lead researcher from the Department of Geomatics Engineerin­g.

A ferocious blaze in May 2016 consumed 10 per cent of Fort McMurray’s buildings and forced 88,000 people from their homes for at least a month.

The Slave Lake fire five years earlier caused significan­t damage that included the destructio­n of 510 structures and an evacuation order affecting 15,000 residents.

The study by Hassan and colleagues Razu Ahmed and Khan Rubayet Rahaman found that 30 per cent of the areas within the buffer zones of 10 to 30 metres were vulnerable. Stands of trees and bushes would need to be removed to reduce the effects of a future fire.

“If there is any fire outbreak, the situation will become completely bad. We like Mother Nature but, on the other hand, we also need to mitigate our risk,” Hassan said.

“Otherwise there will be some challenges for our survival in the heart of the forested land.”

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