Jim Steele writes: I am excited to announce my local weekly paper the Pacifica Tribune has added me as a columnist. Every 2 weeks I will post my column “What’s Natural”. The publisher has 5 other papers in the SF paper which might also carry the column. To publish a more skeptical and scientific opinion, while deep in the heart of this blue state is a bold move and reveals a commitment to objectivity and I am eager to see what kind of reaction it gets. Pacifica is just south of San Francisco. Next column will be a look at drought.
What’s Natural?
In early December I surveyed the horrific Camp Fire disaster in Paradise. Having been director for 25 years of a university field station located in the heart of the Tahoe National Forest, I’ve been a “student” of fire ecology for 30 years and wanted a closer look at why row after row of homes completely incinerated while surrounding trees were merely scorched, with leaves and needles browned but not burnt?
Large fires have recently ravaged about 1.8 million California acres a year, prompting media and politicians to proclaim a “new normal” that’s “evidence of global warming”. But UC Berkeley fire ecologists have calculated that before 1800, fires burned 4 million California acres each year (despite cooler temperatures). So what natural fire dynamics promote such extensive burning?
Wildfires have indeed increased since 1970, but that’s relative to previous decades of intensive fire prevention. As fire was recognized as a natural and necessary phenomenon for healthy ecosystems a new era began. In the 70s the US Forest Service moved away from extinguishing all fires by 10 AM the day after detection, switching to a “let it burn policy” if human structures were not endangered.
Paradise, unfortunately, sprung up amidst a forest dominated by Ponderosa pines. Largely due to frequent lightning strikes and dry summers, Ponderosa habitat endures fires about every 11 years. Fortunately for California’s coastal residents, lightning is rare. However, both regions are vulnerable to human ignitions, which start 85-95% of all fires. Recognizing this growing problem, a bipartisan bill was presented to Governor Brown two years ago to secure our power grid. Shockingly he vetoed it. That was a bad choice given the Camp Fire, Wine Country Fires and many more were sparked by an ageing electrical infrastructure. Recent studies show larger fires result from a confluence of human ignitions and high winds. But it is not just random coincidence. The high winds that spread these massive fires also blow down power lines that ignite those fires.
In 2008 the world’s foremost expert on fire history, Stephen Pyne lamented, “global warming has furnished political cover to encourage certain fire management decisions while allowing climate to take the blame.” How true. Both PGE and Governor Brown have blamed wildfires on climate change.
When you build a camp fire, you intuitively understand fire ecology basics. You do not hold a match to a log no matter how dry. You start a camp fire with kindling. Fire ecologists call forest kindling, like dead grass, leaves and small shrubs, “fine fuels”. In dry weather “fine fuels” become highly combustible in a matter of hours, or at most days, even during the winter. Furthermore, California’s summer climate is naturally dry for 3-4 months, creating highly combustible habitat each and every summer.
Additionally, camp fires only smolder without enough air, so we huff and puff to get a burst of flames. Likewise, high winds turn a spark into a major conflagration. It was strong winds that rapidly spread the Camp Fire. The fast-moving flames, feeding on “fine fuels” littering the forest floor, generated enough heat to ignite flammable homes that then burned from the inside out; but only enough heat to char the bark of most surrounding trees.
Miraculously spared buildings dotting a devastated landscape made the case for creating “defensible spaces” by managing the “fine fuels”. Surveying one unscathed church, the fire clearly came within 100 feet, scorching the base of every encircling tree. But due to a parking lot and a well-manicured lawn, the lack of “fine fuels” stopped the fire in its tracks. Trees on the lawn were not even charred. The public would benefit greatly if wildfire news stories emphasized the need to create adequate defensible spaces.
With high deserts to the east and the ocean to the west, California’s winds shift with the seasons. Land temperatures always change faster than the ocean’s. In the summer, warmer land surfaces draw in moist sea breezes. The resulting fog moistens coastal landscapes and reduces fire danger there. Thus, any warming, whether natural or CO2 driven, should increase the fog.
In the autumn, the land cools faster than the ocean causing the winds to reverse direction. The colder it gets, the stronger the winds blow from the high deserts towards the coast, peaking in December. These winds are called Santa Annas in southern California. The Wine Country fires were spread by the Diablo winds. But regardless of the name, the science is the same. Accordingly, it was November winds that fanned a spark into an inferno aimed directly at the heart of Paradise.
It has long been known that due to these autumn and winter winds, much of California endures a dangerous fire season year-round. On the optimistic side, any warming of the land during the cool seasons, whether natural or CO2 driven, should reduce these winds. Indeed, the natural drivers of wildfire are very complex, and maintaining a defensible space is our safest bet.
Jim Steele is author of “Landscapes and Cycles: An Environmentalist’s Journey to Climate Skepticism”. Contact him at naturalclimatechange@earthlink.net
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Jim – Great article. As someone who lost a home to the 2009 Victorian bushfire, I have personal experience of fire behaviour a and some understanding of the reasons why some homes burn and others survive. The biggest problem seems to be the lack of protection for openings along with the impact of embers. Big fires also generate high winds and the so called “embers” are really large chunks of wood and burning bark from trees. Victoria’s main expert on wildfire behaviour attributes up to 85% of homes are lost due to ember attack and the bigger the fire, the faster it travels. Yes, vegetation and fuel loads are important, but they will always build up over the years, giving us these ‘once in a generation forest fires’, so if people are going to live in the forests (as I do), then the house has to be designed to withstand the firestorm. I rebuilt, and the new house has rammed earth walls, steel roof, fire blanket underneath that wraps down onto the walls, and fire shutters on every opening. Keep publishing as we need your calming influence.
Rammed earth or straw bale construction is highly fire resistant as well as very attractive, and often less expensive. I’ve seen photos of bale structures that withstood fire that obliterated surrounding structures.
And rammed earth would be perfect for a lot of Southern California Fire risk areas. I’m interested to hear more about how the fire blanket and roof/walls integrate. Is it to seal the soffits and save vents?
No the main reason for the fire blanket was to stop fire entry at roof level. It wraps onto the walls so that embers cannot get inside the ceiling spaces. It seals off all the soffits under the roof and there are no air vents through the walls. Not sure if that would be legal in some jurisdictions. We do have penetrations for aircon and the like, but they are all sealed with intumescent mastic. Above the fire blanket is a thick insulation layer of rock wool overlain by the steel roof. I was on the building commissioners round table that came up with the improved building standards and codes for building in bushfire areas – so had a heads up before we designed the house as to what was going to be required. We are in Flame Zone – the highest rating and need a structure rated for direct flame contact. The fire shutters are designed and tested for one hour of direct flame. To lose one house was unfortunate – to lose two would be careless!
How many house fires started because of a power surge ???
CBS News reports, “A power surge left thousands without power for most of the day in Stockton after smart meters on their homes exploded on Monday.” “Neighbors in the South Stockton area described it as a large pop, a bomb going off, and strong enough to shake a house.”
http://emfsafetynetwork.org/dozens-of-smart-meters-explode-from-power-surge/
And when people evacuated, were they told to unplug all electrical appliances??
“The alarm was first raised shortly before 8am when people called the fire brigade to report their appliances had started smoking and catching fire.”
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/7673018/Televisions-across-town-catch-fire-after-power-surge-caused-by-theft.html
Jim: What are you considering “natural?” Does that include people? Are they part of nature, in your opinion?
My thought is that California Indians created and maintained the vast prairies and savannas with purposeful landscape-scale fires for millennia before white settlers arrived with their horses and cattle. Lightning fires would have been secondary in their influence on animals and plants, and “wildfires” would be unusual. Your thoughts?
My PhD is in the study of fire history in western Oregon (Coast Range) over the past 500 years — where there is hardly any lightning ever, and then usually accompanied by drenching rains — but the patterns of savannas and grasslands in the interior valleys is much the same as areas more prone to lightning strikes. Same with native animal “habitat” — a function of adapting to people and fire over thousands of years. Nothing to do with “climate change” or periodic “wildfires.”
That’s wonderful news Jim. I spend a lotta time in Pacifica as it is where my “significant other” resides. Been trying to get her to read some of your writings for a while. But no, she’s stubborn and thoroughly indoctrinated in the alarmist ideology. Now she will probably read you as she reads the Tribune!
Lets (you and your significant other) have a glass of wine at Pacifica’s Grape in the Fog and chat. Just give me a date.
Would like to. I’ll get back to you on that.
This is some funny shit! Your trying to make up a scenario where the trees didn’t burn but the houses did. Perhaps you forgot to look at the cars and how they melted in a straight line.
Yea maybe you need to cut back on the damage control and go full energy weapons and Agenda 21.
Third Eye, What are you ranting about? Making up a scenario?
You confuse observation . Obviously you have not surveyed the area or paid attention to all the photos with incinerated houses and cars, but with standing trees, ie the accompanying photo. There are hundreds of similar photos
Jim – we had the same issue – 207 houses in our town burned out of 324 whilst many of the big old Eucalypts survived – when it got to us – the fire was no more than 8 to 10 feet above ground level and the biggest source of fuel on the property was the house itself. I can send photos of the aftermath with many trees still standing but the brush below completely burned out. This guy no not of what he speaks.
It is very difficult to remove all human sources of ignition. It is worthwhile to try, but very difficult to achieve suppression of all human sources. A hot catalytic converter is enough to start dry grass on fire.
It is impossible to change the issue with dry weather and wind.
All you have control over is the fuel load, and the resistance of the homes to withstand a fast moving “fire storm” as well as pine trees do.
Remove fine fuels around homes. New homes built to be fire resistant. Both on the exterior, and sealing ventilation systems.
And targeted burning of surrounding areas. Those areas will burn. It is just a question of whether it burns on a day of our choosing, or it burns under the worst possible conditions, with no resources in place. For many places we need to move beyond “natural burning” to scheduled burning.