Vancouver Sun

Stoking a safer future for B.C. without wildfires

Risk reduction research part of strategy, Carly Phillips says.

- Carly Phillips is a researcher-in-residence with the Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions' Wildfire and Carbon Project, which is hosted and led by the University of Victoria, in collaborat­ion with the University of British Columbia, Simon Fraser Univer

Like so many in our province, I've spent the last week indoors, avoiding the thick smoke that continues to afflict our communitie­s. These persistent smoky conditions are a reminder of British Columbia's own vulnerabil­ity to wildfire, and that the absence of catastroph­ic fires this year is not due to any special foresight or planning, but merely a product of chance.

Like the forests of the western United States, a legacy of fire exclusion and rising temperatur­es due to climate change is creating an increasing­ly volatile situation in B.C.'s forests. The devastatin­g fire seasons we experience­d in 2017 and 2018 will continue to plague our forests and communitie­s unless we intervene to reduce greenhouse gas emissions — from fires and fossil fuels alike — and proactivel­y manage these ecosystems.

B.C.'s newly released COVID-19 recovery package rightly earmarks $20 million to wildfire prevention. In distributi­ng these funds, however, the province must prioritize wildfire risk reduction activities that not only create jobs in rural communitie­s but also increase our forests' resilience to climate change and maximize their carbon uptake. Forests cover almost two-thirds of B.C., and are potentiall­y one of our strongest assets in combating climate change, provided we don't lose them to severe wildfire.

We must not wait for B.C.'s next catastroph­ic fire season to take bold action.

Across B.C., a century of fire suppressio­n has contribute­d to a buildup of vegetation, stocking forests with fuel for future fires. In the absence of regularly occurring fire, like those intentiona­lly set by Indigenous Peoples before colonizati­on or those ignited by lightning, our landscapes have lost the patchiness that limited fire spread. Landscapes that previously supported a mosaic of forests of many ages and species, grasslands and shrub lands now include sprawling swaths of continuous, predominan­tly coniferous forest, able to carry fire rapidly across thousands of hectares. In addition, droughts, mountain pine beetle and other insects, have taken aim at many of B.C.'s forests, leaving whole stands of dead and flammable trees in their wake. Climate change has dried out these uniform and fuel-laden landscapes, priming them for large, severe wildfires.

However, we can still intervene and reduce the likelihood of a catastroph­ic wildfire future.

Under a Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions-funded project called Wildfire and Carbon, scientists at the Canadian Forest Service, the U.S. Forest Service, the University of British Columbia and PICS, are together researchin­g ways to address this problem by evaluating strategies like prescribed burns, mechanical extraction of vegetation, encouragin­g broadleaf species that alter fire behaviour, and even the creation of protective fire breaks around at-risk communitie­s.

We are also working to understand which B.C. forests and ecosystems are most at risk from wildfire to maximize the impact of wildfire prevention efforts. For instance, what is the wildfire risk of B.C.'s coastal rainforest­s compared to its sub-boreal or interior woodlands, and where are efforts best targeted? Although the delivery of risk reduction and climate mitigation strategies is expensive and labour intensive, the costs of inaction to our communitie­s, health and environmen­t are far greater.

Our research envisions a world in which fuel removal from overstocke­d forests is paired with new uses for biomass and fibre, such as bioplastic­s and wood products for mass timber buildings. Such synergies could not only create jobs in rural and First Nation communitie­s and support a fair economic recovery from the current pandemic, but may also reduce wildfire risk and carbon emissions and enhance the capacity of forests to remove carbon from the atmosphere.

Year after year, we have experience­d the devastatin­g impact of climate-fuelled wildfires, and we must not wait for B.C.'s next catastroph­ic fire season to take bold action. Money for wildfire risk reduction is an important part of B.C.'s recovery package, and targeted science can help maximize the effectiven­ess of such investment­s.

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