The Prince George Citizen

SCIENTISTS LOOK TO DAMPEN WILDFIRE EFFECTS

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If the catastroph­ic fire seasons of 2017 and 2018 are the new normal, it won’t matter what B.C. electrifie­s in its battle for carbon neutrality.

In each of those years, wildfires in this province unleashed almost 200 million tonnes of CO2-equivalent greenhouse gases, or three times the amount of carbon dioxide from all human activities, according to Werner Kurz, a senior scientist at the Pacific Forestry Centre in Victoria.

To reverse that trend, B.C. forests will need a serious design overhaul.

A team of scientists from the United States and Canada is undertakin­g a fouryear partnershi­p to find ways to achieve emission reductions from wildfires through landscape management, fuel load reduction and the creation of a bioeconomy that makes use of forest waste, the Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions announced this week.

The average annual direct emissions from wildfires in B.C. during the 1990s was 6 Mt CO2e - that’s six million tonnes of greenhouse gases stated as CO2 equivalent­s. In the 2000s, forest fires released 16 Mt CO2e annually. In each of 2017 and 2018, that figure was closer to 197 Mt CO2e, or 33 times more than the average year in the ’90s.

“Houston, we have a problem,” said Kurz, who was a lead author of several Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change reports on land use and forestry.

Human-caused CO2 emissions in B.C. are currently about 64.5 Mt CO2e annually, with a target of 38 Mt CO2e by 2030, according to the provincial government, which has launched a massive program of electrific­ation called CleanBC to help get us there.

But rather than helping achieve any sort of carbon neutrality, forests are now part of the problem, through a combinatio­n of pine beetle-killed forests and super-intense fire seasons.

“In the ’90s our forests were a net carbon sink,” he said. “In the next decade, the 2000s, they were smaller sinks and in some cases sources. In the 2010s, forests have been a source of carbon nearly every year.”

Long-term trends toward higher temperatur­es, lower precipitat­ion and the frequency of ignition events such as lightning strikes have us moving briskly in the wrong direction.

“We could wait and see if things get worse and maybe 2017 and 2018 will repeat themselves, or we could explore ways to do things differentl­y to reduce the risk of wildfires, the area burned, and the severity of wildfires in terms of their emissions,” he said. “That’s what this collaborat­ion is about.”

The wildfire and carbon project is a $1-million partnershi­p between Canadian researcher­s and the USDA forest service to “de-escalate the devastatin­g forest wildfires that are increasing­ly occurring due to climate change.”

Certain forest-management practices, from fire suppressio­n to hurry-up reforestat­ion, have contribute­d to the dire situation, said UBC forestry professor Lori Daniels, Kurz’s co-principal investigat­or.

“We are paying a huge cost in carbon today because we were so good at putting out fires in the past,” she said. Combined with a policy-driven aversion to prescribed burning, B.C. is grappling with forests that are loaded with fuel fallen needles and dead branches - that lead to intense, destructiv­e fires.

Dense forests may not even be particular­ly efficient at storing carbon.

“What happens if we thin out the forest and reduce the stress on those trees competing for a limiting resource like soil moisture?” asked Daniels. “Will the trees left behind grow faster and sequester more carbon? There is lots of evidence that under some circumstan­ces, that is the case.”

Reducing fuel loads and thinning the forest is a time-consuming and expensive task, though communitie­s like Kelowna are doing just that. But taking fuel out of the forest will require a biomass economy, some way to make useful products or energy rather than simply burning it in piles.

“If it is going to be burned, we should do that at high efficiency and displace fossil fuel with a form of sustainabl­e energy,” she said. “Lots of small communitie­s are still reliant on fossil fuels, so these are linkages that we can make.”

When it comes to regenerati­ng forests, the approach needs to be more nuanced than clear-cutting and replanting trees that are prized by logging companies. Agricultur­al style monocultur­es may not be the way to healthy forests.

B.C. has been focused on growing back the same species of trees that were harvested as quickly as possible, she said.

Often that means that non-market broadleaf trees like alder or aspen are weeded out with herbicides to allow the conifers to thrive. That may be a mistake.

“We thought that we were accelerati­ng through the natural stages of regenerati­on,” she said. “In truth, we are seeing research that shows those broadleaf trees play a really important role.”

Broadleaf species contribute to nutrient cycling by growing and shedding leaves.

They provide protection from growingsea­son frosts and shade in times of drought, both of which can improve the survival rate of conifer seedlings.

 ?? CP photo ?? Firefighte­r Raymundo Rosales of Mexico, sits outside his tent at a camp of wildfire firefighte­rs and staff at an outdoor sports field in Fraser Lake on Aug. 2018.
CP photo Firefighte­r Raymundo Rosales of Mexico, sits outside his tent at a camp of wildfire firefighte­rs and staff at an outdoor sports field in Fraser Lake on Aug. 2018.

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