Nighttime wildfire respite no longer `a given'
Firefighters work overnight more often due to abundance of bone-dry fuel: study
The darkness of night has traditionally signalled reprieve for wildland firefighters, but a new Canadian study shows that's changing, and drought is the driving force.
The availability of bone-dry fuels is the key mechanism promoting extreme fire behaviour and growth at night, the study says, though warming temperatures are also eroding the “climatological barrier” that has typically limited overnight burning.
Uncovering the role of drought led the researchers to further show that daytime conditions can be used to predict whether a fire will continue to burn and possibly spread through the night — information that could be crucial for firefighting efforts.
“We have fire growth models, and they handle the day really well most of the time, and that's usually the most important part. But they don't really do well at night,” says Mike Flannigan, one of the study's co-authors in British Columbia.
“Any kind of information of how active a fire will be at night is really critical ... especially if a fire is approaching a town, like West Kelowna last year,” he says, recalling a fast-moving blaze that began tearing through part of the Okanagan community one evening last August, ultimately destroying nearly 200 homes.
Wildland firefighters work overnight in such situations, when flames are threatening people and infrastructure, Flannigan says. It's not standard policy for most blazes, and traditionally, nighttime reprieve is “almost relied upon as a given,” he says.
The study, published Wednesday in the peer-reviewed journal Nature, suggests that is an increasingly risky bet as climate models predict summers will get hotter and drier, conditions that Flannigan describes as a “powder keg” for wildfire.
Canada's drought bulletin shows pockets of “exceptional” and “extreme” drought in central B.C. and southern Alberta, while drought conditions in swaths of both provinces were classified as moderate to severe at the time of the Feb. 29 update.
“If I were looking toward this summer, I'd be worried about overnight burning,” says Flannigan, a professor at Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops and the B.C. research chair in predictive services, emergency management and fire science.
The study used wildfire records and satellite data to examine more than 23,500 blazes across North America from 2017 to 2020. The researchers identified 1,095 overnight burning events associated with 340 wildfires and found the vast majority spanned at least 10 square kilometres.
The paper says the driving forces were the dryness and availability of forest fuels, such as grasses, fallen leaves, twigs and branches.