Fire Fighting in European Union: Don’t Forget The Decade of Policy Failures in California

By Stephen Heins, The Word Merchant

The cycle is as predictable as it is tragic. As we look at the headlines coming out of Europe—where labor unions are once again clamoring for massive new tranches of funding to combat the looming wildfire season—it feels as if we are watching a poorly scripted sequel to a decade of policy failures here in California.

The parallels are startling, and they reveal a fundamental misunderstanding of what actually causes these catastrophes. Whether in the Mediterranean or the American West, the narrative has become a convenient shield for policymakers: blame “climate change,” ignore the structural rot, and then demand more taxpayer money to sustain a broken status quo.

It is the same political theater we have seen since the 2018 fire season, and yet here we are in 2026, still ignoring the lessons laid out in clear, clinical detail by the Hoover Institution years ago.

The Illusion of “Preparedness”

In California, we’ve spent years perfecting the art of the emergency proclamation. We fast-track projects, move money around, and declare our intent to be “resilient.” Yet, the fundamental issues identified by researchers—the aging, neglected utility infrastructure, and the failure to manage forest fuel loads—are often treated as secondary to the political optics of the response.

The Hoover Institution’s analyses of the 2018 Camp Fire were not just historical post-mortems; they were warnings. They pointed to a reality that politicians desperately want to avoid: that catastrophic fires are often the result of decaying, century-old infrastructure and long-standing regulatory paralysis.

In California, the response to the subsequent insurance crisis—driven by years of under-pricing risk and heavy-handed rate controls—has essentially hollowed out the private market. When you force insurers to subsidize risk, they eventually pack their bags. The result isn’t a safer state; it’s a state where the public is increasingly left to hold the bag for unmitigated, unpriced exposure.

The European Mirror

Now, we see the European Union following this exact trajectory. The EU’s recent deployment of a record number of firefighters and aircraft is presented as a triumph of “European solidarity.” While the courage of the individuals on the front lines is unquestionable, this approach is the definition of reactive management. It is a “wait and pray” strategy.

When unions demand more funding for equipment and personnel without addressing the underlying land-management policies or the economic incentives that drive development in high-risk areas, they are simply pouring resources into a leaky bucket. The EU, like California, faces a fiscal reality in which there is simply no “spare” money. Every euro funneled into an emergency response that fails to address the root cause is a euro taken away from economic growth, infrastructure modernization, or genuine, long-term environmental restoration.

The Cost of Ignoring Reality

The Hoover Institution’s critique of California’s policy failures is centered on a hard truth. When you prioritize political narrative over economic and scientific reality, you inevitably end up with a crisis that grows more expensive with every passing season.

We saw this in the 2024 and 2025 fire seasons in Los Angeles and the surrounding regions.

Despite massive investments in suppression, the fires continue to push against the boundaries of our suburban sprawl, exposing the flaws in our planning and our failure to harden our own communities. We are still relying on a system in which public resources are expected to address private-sector failures in risk management.

If Europe continues to follow the California model—treating fire as a purely logistical problem to be solved with more government spending, rather than a land-management and regulatory problem to be solved with market-based incentives and rigorous infrastructure upkeep—they will inevitably face the same fiscal cliff we are currently navigating.

A Call for Substance over Rhetoric

It is time to stop the “whining for more money” and start the difficult work of structural reform. This means:

Decoupling Policy from Panic: Moving away from the cycle of emergency funding and toward long-term, self-sustaining forest management programs.

Infrastructure Accountability: Treating utility maintenance as the primary life-safety issue it is, rather than a regulatory afterthought.

Risk-Based Economics: Allowing insurance markets to reflect the actual risks of living in the wildland-urban interface. If it is too expensive to insure, it is too dangerous to build there. 

Prudent Land Use: Ending the trend of allowing development in high-fire-risk zones unless those communities are physically hardened to survive the inevitable.

The fires of the past decade were not merely acts of nature; they were acts of negligence.

If we continue to ignore the evidence, we are not just failing to protect our homes and forests—we are willfully inviting the next disaster, ensuring that we will be here again in another year, begging for funds for a fire that should have been prevented in the first place.

The solution is not more spending; it is more sanity. When will our leaders stop looking for the next emergency budget appropriation and start looking at the maps, the infrastructure, and the incentives that have brought us to this burning point?


Editor’s note. Here are some of the Hoover Institution sources referenced above.

https://www.hoover.org/research/wildfires-are-californias-public-enemy-number-one-state-and-local-government-should-do

https://www.hoover.org/research/california-burning-causes-and-way-forward

https://www.hoover.org/research/californias-forest-fire-tragedy

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13 Comments
June 27, 2026 10:25 pm

Back in the days of “the good old days”, so much depised by left leaning ecotards, Spain had significant less forest fires.

Shepherds sat in the shadow of the trees while goats and sheep took care of the underbrush. What those animals would not eat was periodically cleaned up either by locals that needed combustible material or the authorities.

So hardly any fuel for the fire left in case one broke out.

Well this now “reigning” idiocrats provoke exact the opposite in their quest to “protect nature” and putting an end to decades of good forest management.

No more need to be said than pursuing the idea of arsonists that turn out to be “firefighters” attempting to maintain their otherwise useless jobs is tempting

A government produced problem: not fighting fire with fire but extinguishing it with gasoline. With the EU involved it will only worsen and of course get way more expensive.

Bruce Cobb
June 27, 2026 11:03 pm

But remember, “Only you can prevent forest fires”.

Scissor
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
June 28, 2026 5:56 am

In California, the leftists in charge actually want things to get worse as it is how they profit and retain power.

Mike Larkin
June 27, 2026 11:19 pm

Another thing the senior idiots in charge are very fond of these days is the use of very expensive aircraft, the more aircraft the better.

This despite the fact that aircraft have SFA effect on a well established wild fire. They have their place in helping to set break lines and for rapid reaction to protect properties from sudden wind changes, but dumping a load of water and/or retardant over the main body of a fire is absolutely useless because the stuff evaporates on the way down.

All the money being used for those aircraft means that spending for the fire fighters on the ground, who actually control and extinguish fires, as well as prevent them from starting by doing cool winter burns, gets cut.

Why? Because as a fire chief you get bragging rights for the most sexy aircraft you can deploy over a fire at fire chief conventions.

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  Mike Larkin
June 27, 2026 11:23 pm

Yabut, it looks so cool.

Reply to  Mike Larkin
June 28, 2026 2:26 am

SFA stands for exactly what? Google AI comes up with “State Fire Assistance” A 2nd try and Google comes up with Sweet Fanny Adams. Readers shouldn’t have to spend their valuable time trying to figure out what undefined acronyms mean. The “F” is probably the usual four letter crudity most of us use from time to time. Probably means “… no effect …”

Scissor
Reply to  Steve Case
June 28, 2026 4:35 am

My use of AI says, SFA most likely stands for Specialized Firefighting Aircraft or Surveillance and Fire Assessment. It refers to planes or helicopters used to map, drop retardant, or manage wildland fires.

The former sounds right.

MrGrimNasty
June 28, 2026 12:29 am

And in the UK ‘rewilding’ is blamed for making fires worse.

https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/2097747/labour-rewilding-plans-wildfires-death-natural-england

But clearly there are other causes too.

Banning disposable BBQ sales would make a huge difference.

Tackling the epidemic of malicious and mischievous arson is not so easy.

Dave Andrews
June 28, 2026 7:46 am

In relation to California Michael Cembelest noted in JP Morgan’s 15th Annual Energy Paper (March 2025)

“Almost the entire footprint of the Californian Palisades fire have burned consistently since 1900 and fell within the ‘Very High Fire Hazard Security Zone’ ”

“From 1990 -2020 California built 1.5m homes in the wild fire- urban interface and from 2020 to 2022 insurance companies declined to renew 2.8m homeowner policies in California”

“The bottom line: why don’t fire fighter staffing levels, insurance premiums, grid management policies, controlled burns, fire resistant materials requirements, and other policies reflect the long standing fire-related risks in the Los Angeles area?”

June 28, 2026 8:07 am

California wildfires are CAUSED by arson, improperly contained and extinguished campfires, and electric transmission equipment malfunctions. Other factors CONTRIBUTE to severity and extent. It’s time to change the climate of carelessness, wontonness and stupidity.

John Hultquist
June 28, 2026 8:16 am

A few thoughts from phrases used in the essay:
forest fuel loads
There is abundant fuel in what most do not think of as a forest.

“unless those communities are physically hardened to survive
Programs such as “Fire Wise” and “Fire Adapted Communities” exist but the home/land owner is responsible for significant labor and/or costs, think prohibitive for many.

risks of living in the wildland-urban interface
Known as the WUI — woo-E. This is a situation similar to living on the beach having built a house on sand. Living in the woods is appealing. My neighbor loves the ambiance of the woo-E and won’t remove anything unless it falls across her driveway. Me? I’m consistently removing material out to 100+ feet from buildings.
Use Google Earth Pro or similar to have a look here:
47.800410, -120.642768
The trees are conifers with an under-story of native shrubs and grass. These low growing plants are called “ladder fuels.”
Good luck!

June 28, 2026 8:42 am

Like the professor told us in Forest Protection class in 1966, the 3 most important factors regarding forest fires are, “fuel load, fuel load and fuel load in that order.”

Bob
June 28, 2026 4:28 pm

I have one word government.