The Guardian (USA)

Biden’s efforts to clear wildfire fuel in US forests are falling short

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Using chainsaws, heavy machinery and controlled burns, the Biden administra­tion is trying to turn the tide on worsening wildfires in the US west through a multibilli­on-dollar cleanup of forests choked with dead trees and undergrowt­h.

Yet one year into what is envisioned as a decade-long effort, federal land managers are scrambling to catch up after falling behind on several of their priority forests for thinning even as they exceeded goals elsewhere. And they have skipped over some highly atrisk communitie­s to work in less threatened areas, according to data obtained by the Associated Press, public records and congressio­nal testimony.

With the climate crisis making the situation increasing­ly dire, mixed early results from the administra­tion’s initiative underscore the challenge of reversing decades of lax forest management and aggressive fire suppressio­n that allowed many woodlands to become tinderboxe­s. The ambitious effort comes amid pushback from lawmakers dissatisfi­ed with progress to date and criticism from some environmen­talists for cutting too many trees.

Administra­tion officials in interviews and during testimony maintained that the thinning work is making a difference. Work announced to date, they said, will help lessen wildfire dangers faced by more than 500 communitie­s in 10 states. But they also acknowledg­ed finishing the task will require far more resources than what is already dedicated.

“As much money as we’re receiving, it’s not enough to take care of the problems that we are seeing, particular­ly across the west,” said the Forest Service chief, Randy Moore. “This is an emergency situation in many places, and we are acting with a sense of urgency.”

Big money for a big problem

Congress in the last two years approved more than $4bn in additional funding to prevent repeats of destructiv­e infernos that have torched communitie­s including in California, Colorado and Montana.

By logging and burning trees and low-lying vegetation, officials hope to lessen forest fuels and keep fires that originate on federal lands from exploding through nearby cities and towns.

The scale of the task is evident in an aerial view of California’s Tahoe national forest, where mountainsi­des are colored brown and gray with the vast number of trees killed by insects and drought. After work on the Tahoe was delayed last year, Forest Service crews and contractor­s recently started taking down trees across thousands of acres.

“The forests as we know them in California and across the west, they’re dying. They’re being destroyed through fire. They’re dying from drought, disease and insects,” said the forest supervisor Eli Ilano. “They’re dying at a pace that we’re having trouble keeping up with.”

The scale of spending is unpreceden­ted, said Courtney Schultz with Colorado State University. The forest policy expert said millions of acres had been through environmen­tal review and were ready for work.

“If we really want to go big across the landscape – to reduce fuels enough to affect fire behavior and have some impact on communitie­s – we need to be planning large projects,” she said.

Key to that strategy is addressing forest patches where computer simulation­s show wildfire could easily spread to inhabited areas.

Only about a third of the land the US Forest Service treated last year was designated with high wildfire hazard potential, agency documents show. About half the forest was in the south-eastern US, where wildfires are less severe but weather conditions make it easier to use intentiona­l burns, the documents show.

The infrastruc­ture bill passed two years ago with bipartisan support included a requiremen­t for the administra­tion to treat forests across 10m acres – 15,625 sq miles or 40,500 sq kilometers – by 2027. Less than 10% of that was addressed in the first year.

“The Forest Service is obligating hundreds of millions of dollars, but not in the areas required by law,” said Joe Manchin, the senator from West Virginia who chairs the Senate energy and natural resources committee.

The Forest Service spokespers­on Wade Muehlhof said the agency was confident in the administra­tion’s strategy, but declined to say if it would meet the acreage mandates.

Mixed first-year results

An AP analysis of federal data reveals the scale of the challenge: Hundreds of communitie­s are threatened by the potential for fires to ignite on federal forests and spread to populated areas.

In California, thinning zones announced to date address the risk to only about one in five houses and other buildings potentiall­y exposed to fires on federal lands, the analysis shows. In Nevada and Oregon, it is about half of exposed structures, and in Montana it is one in 25.

Most areas identified as hotspots where forest fires have high potential to burn into populated areas will not be addressed for at least the next several years, according to government planning documents. And computer models project up to 20% of areas that need thinning will be hit by fires before that work occurs.

Architects of the Forest Service’s strategy based it on tens of millions of computer wildfire simulation­s being used to predict areas that pose the greatest risk. Those scenarios showed fires on only 10% to 20% of the land would account for 80% of exposure to communitie­s.

“This is a mapped plan through time, where we can laser-focus on one highly important issue: the problem of communitie­s being destroyed by wildfires started on public lands,” said the Forest Service fire scientist Alan Ager.

Falling short in a risky area

In 2022, the Forest Service missed its treatment goals in four of 10 areas targeted as priorities. One was the Tahoe national forest’s North Yuba region, where the agency addressed only 6% of the acreage planned.

Small towns tucked into the forest’s canyons escaped disaster two years ago when the Dixie fire raged just to the north, destroying several communitie­s and burning about 1,500 sq miles (3,900 sq km) in the Sierra Nevada range. Those communitie­s also escaped another fire to the south that burned more than 1,000 homes and structures. The previous year, yet another fire killed 15 people and torched more than 2,000 homes and structures in the region.

The same conditions that whipped those fires into infernos exist on the Tahoe forest – densely packed trees and underbrush primed to burn following years of drought. And government computer modeling suggests it is among the US communitie­s most exposed to wildfires on federal lands.

Five million trees died on the Tahoe last year alone, said Ilano, the forest supervisor.

“What we’re realizing is we’re not moving fast enough, that the fires are burning bigger and more intense, more quickly than we anticipate­d,” Ilano said.

Earlier this month, tracked vehicles including one known as a “harvester” worked through dense stands on the North Yuba, clipping large trees at their base and stripping them bare of branches in just seconds, then piling the trunks to be burned later. Elsewhere, work crews walked slowly behind a wood chipper as it was pulled along a forest road, stuffing the machine with small trees and branches cut to clear the understory.

The increased logging needed to reach the government’s lofty goals has gained acceptance as the growing toll from wildfires softens longstandi­ng opposition from some environmen­tal groups and ecologists.

“Gone are the days when things were black and white and either good or bad,” said Melinda Booth, former director of the South Yuba River Citizens League. “We need targeted treatment, targeted thinning, which does include logging.”

Others think officials are going too far. Sue Britting with Sierra Forest Legacy says the North Yuba plan includes about nine sq miles (23 sq km) of older trees and stands along waterways that should be preserved. Yet for most of the work, Britting said it’s time to “move forward” on a thinning project years in the making.

Obstacles to thinning strategy

Hindering the Forest Service nationwide is a shortage of workers to cut and remove trees on the scale demanded, government officials and forestry experts say. Litigation ties up many projects, with environmen­tal reviews taking three years on average before work begins, according to the Property and Environmen­t Research Center, thinktank based in Bozeman, Montana.

Another problem: thinning operations are not allowed in federally designated wilderness areas. That puts off limits about a third of national forest areas that expose communitie­s to high wildfire risk and means some thinning work must be carried out in a patchwork fashion.

Keeping track of progress presents its own challenges. Acres that get worked on are often counted twice or more – first when the trees are cut down, again when leftover piles of woody material on the same site are removed, and yet again when that landscape is later subjected to prescribed fire, said Schultz of Colorado State University.

Even where thinning is allowed, officials face other potential constraint­s, such as protecting older groves important for wildlife habitat. A Biden inventory of public lands in April identified more than 175,000 sq miles (453,000 sq km) of old growth and mature forests on US government land.

The inventory will be used to craft new rules to better protect those woodlands from fires, insects and other sideeffect­s of the climate crisis. But there’s overlap between older forests and many areas slated for thinning. That includes more than half of the treatment area at North Yuba, according to an AP analysis of mature forest data compiled by the conservati­on group Wild Heritage.

“What’s driving all of this is insect infestatio­n, drought stress, and all of that is related to the climate,” said Wild Heritage’s chief scientist, Dominick DellaSala. “I don’t think you can get out of it by thinning.”

 ?? A Vásquez/AP ?? Tahoe national forest supervisor Eli Ilano talks about how the piles of cut down trees will be burned as part of their efforts to make the forest more resistant to wildfires and droughts. Photograph: Godofredo
A Vásquez/AP Tahoe national forest supervisor Eli Ilano talks about how the piles of cut down trees will be burned as part of their efforts to make the forest more resistant to wildfires and droughts. Photograph: Godofredo
 ?? Photograph: Noah Berger/AP ?? Fire Battalion Chief Craig Newell carries a hose while battling the North Complex fire in Plumas national forest, California, in 2020.
Photograph: Noah Berger/AP Fire Battalion Chief Craig Newell carries a hose while battling the North Complex fire in Plumas national forest, California, in 2020.

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