The Camp Fire, which erupted 90 miles (140 kilometers) north of Sacramento, California, as seen from the Landsat 8 spacecraft, which was launched by NASA and operated by the U.S. Geological Survey. Credit: NASA Earth Observatory image by Joshua Stevens, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey, and MODIS data from NASA EOSDIS/LANCE and GIBS/Worldview.
NASA is now an associate member of the National Wildfire Coordinating
Group, giving the agency new opportunities to collaborate with federal agencies
and other partners to better understand wildland fires and leverage technology
and innovation to prevent and manage them for the benefit of humanity.
The interagency group provides national leadership to enable interoperable wildland fire
operations among federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial partners. The
group works to support the National Cohesive Wildland Fire Management
Strategy’s goals of restoring and maintaining resilient landscapes, creating
fire-adapted communities, and responding to wildfires safely and effectively.
“As wildfires become larger and
more frequent, NASA is working to apply our scientific and technological
knowledge toward this national challenge, and integral to our approach is
forging collaborative partnerships,” said NASA Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy.
“Harnessing our Earth observation capabilities and cutting-edge technology in
safe air operations, we are poised to make new connections that will bolster
wildfire fighting efforts across the government.”
NASA’s inclusion in the
coordination group is a step toward enhancing interagency collaboration. As a
member, NASA will have opportunities to develop solutions with wildland fire
management agencies as partners to share its research and technologies to aid
in the development of standards for wildland fire management. NASA has a rich
history of research, development, and technology transfer in the areas of Earth
science, space technologies, and aeronautics that will support the group’s
mission.
To support the National Wildfire
Coordinating Group, NASA will leverage the combined contributions of research
and development, data gathering and distribution, and technology transfer from
three NASA mission directorates in the areas of earth science, space
technologies, and aeronautics. The interagency group membership will help
augment NASA’s Wildland Fire Management Initiative, which supports the
development, demonstration, and commercialization of wildland fire technology
through awards to small businesses, research institutions, and other technology
innovators.
“A crucial aspect of the National
Wildfire Coordination Group’s role is developing standards for the wildland
fire community to enable interoperability,” said Aitor Bidaburu, executive
board chair for the group. “With NASA, it will significantly enhance the common
operating framework for the interagency wildland fire community.”
NASA’s inclusion also directly
supports recommendations the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and
Technology made in their 2023 report Modernizing Wildland Firefighting to Protect our Firefighters. Specifically, it recommends agencies:
- Immediately assess, adapt,
and field currently available technologies
- Strengthen the full
operational sequence of wildland firefighting
- Accelerate improvement of
predictive wildfire modeling tools
- Encourage development and
field demonstration of prototype systems to expand the nation’s wildfire
response capacity
Primary members of the coordination
group include the Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Bureau of Indian
Affairs, Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, National Association of State Foresters, U.S. Fire
Administration, Intertribal Timber Council, the International Association of
Fire Chiefs, and the Defense Department. Associate members include the Commerce
Department’s National Weather Service, and the Department of the Interior’s
Office of Wildland Fire.
-end-
Rob Margetta
Headquarters, Washington
Source: NASA Joins Group to Advance Wildfire Coordination, Capabilities - NASA
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