Wildfire Management Strategy and Its Relation to Operational Risk

Erin Noonan-Wright, Carl Seielstad

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Changes to US wildfire policy in 2009 blurred the distinction between fires managed for resource benefits and fires with primarily suppression objectives, making management strategies difficult to track. Here, qualitative text is coded from a sample of 282 Wildland Fire Decision Support System Relative Risk Assessments completed on wildfires between 2010 and 2017 to examine the prevalence of different strategies and their associations with risk. Suppression is used most, associated with high risk. Managers discuss intent to suppress even when it is untenable. Monitoring, confine, or point protection are used much less commonly and when risk is low. The Southwest region discusses a diversity of strategies, leveraging landscape barriers from past management to support them; the Northwest discusses suppression or monitoring and rarely links strategy selection to barriers. Based on associations between physical barriers to fire spread, risk, and strategy, creating more barriers may provide a path forward to better implement fire policy.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)352-362
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Forestry
Volume122
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1 2024

Keywords

  • Northwest
  • Southwest
  • U.S
  • U.S. fire management
  • WFDSS
  • barriers
  • geographic area
  • qualitative text data
  • relative risk assessment
  • risk
  • strategy

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