As wildfires increasingly threaten
lives, landscapes, and air quality across the U.S., a Stanford-led study published in AGU Advances finds
that prescribed burns can help reduce risks.
The research reveals that
prescribed burns can reduce the severity of subsequent wildfires by an average
of 16% and net smoke pollution by an average of 14%.
"Prescribed fire is often
promoted as a promising tool in theory to dampen wildfire impacts, but we show
clear empirical evidence that prescribed burning works in practice," said
lead author Makoto Kelp, a postdoctoral fellow in Earth system science at the
Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability. "It's not a cure-all, but it's a
strategy that can reduce harm from extreme wildfires when used
effectively."
Experts consider prescribed burns
an effective strategy to reduce the threat of wildfires. Still, the use of
prescribed burning in western states has expanded only slightly in recent
years. Little research exists to quantify its effectiveness, and public
opinion remains
mixed amid concerns that prescribed burns can lead to smoky air and escaped
fires.
Data-driven fire strategy
At Stanford, Kelp is working with
climate scientist Noah Diffenbaugh and environmental economist Marshall Burke
through the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Climate and Global
Change Postdoctoral Fellowship Program.
Using high-resolution satellite imagery, land management records, and smoke emissions
inventories, the research team compared areas treated with prescribed fire
between late 2018 and spring 2020 to adjacent untreated areas that both later
burned in the extreme 2020 fire season. The analysis found that areas treated
with prescribed fire burned less severely and produced significantly less
smoke.
That finding is particularly
important given the growing recognition of wildfire smoke as a major
public health threat. Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) from wildfires has been linked to
respiratory and cardiovascular problems and is increasingly driving poor air
quality across the U.S.
"People often think of wildfires just in terms of flames and evacuations,"
said Burke, an associate professor of environmental social sciences in the
Doerr School of Sustainability. "But the smoke is a silent and
far-reaching hazard, and prescribed fire may be one of the few tools that
actually reduces total smoke exposure."
Not all treatments are equal
The study also highlights a key
nuance: the authors found that prescribed fires were significantly more
effective outside of the wildland-urban interface (WUI)—the zones where homes meet wildland
vegetation—than within it. In WUI areas, where agencies often rely on
mechanical thinning due to concerns about smoke and safety, fire severity was
reduced by just 8.5%, compared to 20% in non-WUI zones.
"We already know that the
population is growing fastest in the areas of the wildland-urban interface
where the vegetation is most sensitive to climate-induced intensification of
wildfire risk," said Diffenbaugh, the Kara J Foundation Professor in the
Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability and the Kimmelman Family Senior Fellow
at the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment.
"So, understanding why the
prescribed fire treatments are less effective in those areas is a key priority
for effectively managing that intensifying risk."
Smoke trade-offs and policy implications
The study addresses concerns about
smoky air from prescribed burning, finding that the approach produces only
about 17% of the PM2.5 smoke that would be emitted
by a wildfire in the same area. The researchers estimate that if California met
its goal of treating one million acres
annually with prescribed fire, it could cut PM2.5 emissions by 655,000 tons over five years—more than half of the total
smoke pollution from the state's devastating 2020 wildfire season.
The authors note that their
findings likely represent a conservative estimate of the benefits of prescribed
fire, as such treatments can have protective spillover effects on surrounding
untreated areas.
"This kind of empirical evidence is critical for effective policy," said Kelp. "My hope is that it helps inform the ongoing conversation around prescribed fire as a potential wildfire mitigation strategy in California."
Source: Study shows controlled burns can reduce wildfire intensity and smoke pollution
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