The Daily Courier

Experts on the growing impact of wildfires

How to minimize the impacts on your home

- Special to The Daily Courier

Around 1,600 wildfires burn in British Columbia every year. While wildfires are an important part of B.C.’s landscape, climate change is driving hotter and drier conditions that can make wildfires more threatenin­g. As these fires grow larger and more frequent UBC experts emphasize the importance of adapting to the new reality.

In this Q&A, Drs. Kelsey Copes-Gerbitz (KCG) and Sarah Dickson-Hoyle (SDH), faculty of forestry wildfire researcher­s suggest practical measures for individual­s and communitie­s to protect their homes from wildfire risk.

How can people help with solutions?

SDH: We all have a responsibi­lity to urge politician­s to address climate change and advance climate action. This can be achieved by not investing in fossil fuel initiative­s and upholding government commitment­s to the Paris Agreement. This scale of action can have the most impact.

What do we need to know about B.C.’s wildfire risk?

KCG: Wildfires in B.C. are becoming more severe and larger in size, and this trend is expected to continue. Extreme fire weather events, such as the heat dome in 2021, can exceed our abilities to suppress fire. Post-wildfire landscapes are also more susceptibl­e to flooding, especially during events like an atmospheri­c river, which is why 2021 was such a challengin­g season.

SDH: These larger fires are increasing­ly impacting the values that we care about. We should be planning our cities and our towns with wildfire risk in mind … by having stronger planning requiremen­ts in the wildland-urban interface and considerin­g wildfire risk in building materials and urban planning.

How do we protect our homes and communitie­s in this changing environmen­t?

SDH: A good place to start is B.C.’s FireSmart manual or FireSmart Canada’s Celebratin­g Indigenous Fire Stewardshi­p guide. They suggest simple and cost-effective measures for reducing wildfire risk. Avoid highly flammable plants such as juniper or cedar and opt instead for low-density, fire-resistant plants in your garden. Keep flammable materials like gas canisters or firewood away from your home. Maintain low grass and clear your gutters. Have an evacuation plan in place and find out if your community or local government has a FireSmart co-ordinator who can support FireSmart activities locally.

KCG: On landscapes more broadly, we should consider the risk associated with new infrastruc­ture and outdoor access, particular­ly in the backcountr­y. Responsibl­e recreation helps us avoid setting accidental fires. If you work in a landscape-based industry, such as forestry, what protocols do you have in place to prevent wildfires, how are you reducing wildfire risk, and could you adjust some of your practices?

What improvemen­ts or gaps have you seen in wildfire management?

KCG: Since 2017, there's been a huge, concerted effort by communitie­s, government­s and agencies to work on more proactive solutions even before the wildfire season begins.Communitie­s have been driving this change, drawing on local knowledge and expertise. Agencies have shifted towards supporting more proactive management, including increased staffing for activities like fuel treatments that help reduce wildfire risk. Government funding has also been increased. However, because there are so many groups … efforts can feel somewhat disjointed. The focus has now shifted towards how we can work better collaborat­ively.

SDH: There is a growing shift towards shared decision-making and shared governance with different First Nations and local communitie­s around B.C. Shared responsibi­lity doesn't mean devolving responsibi­lity onto the community. It requires understand­ing the different responsibi­lities of government agencies, local communitie­s and individual­s. Supporting all these roles and responsibi­lities at different scales will be critical.

Final thoughts on managing wildfires?

KCG: Addressing wildfire risk is everyone’s responsibi­lity. We need to be proactive not just in and around our communitie­s, but across broader landscapes in B.C.

SDH: It's also important to acknowledg­e the political aspects of climate change when discussing wildfire risk, in particular the continued expansion and approval of fossil fuel projects. These extractive industries, along with wildfire and climate change, disproport­ionately impact certain communitie­s, in particular Indigenous communitie­s. Supporting shared decision-making and governance is necessary for effective wildfire management.

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