The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Climate change sparks disaster fears in Alaska

- By Mark Thiessen

ANCHORAGE, ALASKA >> Research on a flat spot for air evacuation­s. Talk of oldstyle civil defense sirens to warn of fast-moving wildfires. Hundreds of urban firefighte­rs training in wildland firefighti­ng techniques while snow still blankets the ground.

This is the new reality in Alaska’s largest city, where a recent series of wildfires near Anchorage and the hottest day on record have sparked fears that a warming climate could soon mean serious, untenable blazes in urban areas — just like in the rest of the drought-plagued American West.

The risk is particular­ly high in the city’s burgeoning Anchorage Hillside neighborho­od, where multimilli­on-dollar homes have pushed farther and farther up steep slopes and to the forest’s edge. Making the challenge even greater is that many of these areas on the Hillside — home to about 35,000 people — have but one road in and out, meaning that fleeing residents could clog a roadway or be cut off from reaching Anchorage at all.

The prospect of a major wildfire there keeps Anchorage Fire Chief Doug Schrage awake at night when conditions are hot and dry.

“I’ve characteri­zed this as probably the single largest threat to the municipali­ty of Anchorage,” he said.

Schrage’s city fire department is adept at fighting blazes in buildings. But as Anchorage has grown, the available land is higher up, where wild and urban areas intersect, and those fires are very different from what his firefighte­rs are trained to combat.

The city also has limited wildfire equipment, and it’s nearly impossible to get a fire engine up some switchback roads to homes nestled high up mountains.

“Our strategy is basically to put as many resources as we have on duty on a small fire so that we can keep it contained” while waiting for assistance from the Alaska Division of Forestry and Fire Protection, Schrage said.

This spring, 360 city firefighte­rs are training on wildland firefighti­ng tactics like using water hoses to create a line around the perimeter of a fire, and the city is encouragin­g homeowners to participat­e in a program to identify hazards like brush and old trees that would feed a fire before it’s too late. In one hilly neighborho­od, a community council is researchin­g locations for a makeshift helipad that could be used for air evacuation­s.

That same small neighborho­od with but one road in and out has also discussed installing sirens to warn residents on the city’s wooded fringes of fire danger and hopes to build a database of all residents for emergency communicat­ions.

“As much as you wouldn’t want to do it ... it’s like rolling the dice on being alive or dead,” said Matt Moore, who fled his home in 2019 lest he be trapped on the wrong side of the flames on the single road.

Such precaution­s — common in parched and fireprone states like California and Colorado — are relatively new in Anchorage in the face of increased fire risk fueled by global warming. The city reached 90 degrees Fahrenheit four years ago, the city’s hottest temperatur­e on record, and it’s had five significan­t wildfires over the past seven years that were all extinguish­ed before causing much damage.

Still, the U.S. is headed into an El Nino year this season, which traditiona­lly means a bigger fire year and further raises concerns, said Brian Brettschne­ider, a climate scientist with National Weather Service, Alaska Region.

More than 4,844 square miles burned statewide last year — an area just under the size of Connecticu­t.

 ?? MARK THIESSEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Senior Fire Captain Nick Davis demonstrat­es nozzles April 24to other firefighte­rs in Anchorage, Alaska, learning how to fight wildland fires.
MARK THIESSEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Senior Fire Captain Nick Davis demonstrat­es nozzles April 24to other firefighte­rs in Anchorage, Alaska, learning how to fight wildland fires.

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