The Daily - Fighting Canada’s Unending Fires
Episode Date: August 4, 2023The wildfires sweeping Canada have become the largest in its modern history. Across the country, 30 million acres of forest have burned — three times as much land as in the worst American fire in th...e past 50 years.The scale has forced an international response and a re-evaluation of how the world handles wildfires.Firefighters on the front lines discuss the challenges they face, and David Wallace-Wells, a climate columnist for The Times, explores how climate change has shifted thinking about wildfires.Guest: David Wallace-Wells, a climate columnist for The New York Times. Background reading: With most of Canada’s fire season still ahead, the country is on track to produce more carbon emissions from the burning of forests than all of its other human and industrial activities combined, David Wallace-Wells writes in Times Opinion.Canada’s record-breaking wildfire season shows the need to shift from suppressing fires to preventing them as they become more difficult to combat.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is The Daily.
The wildfires that have swept Canada this summer have become the largest in modern history.
The scale has forced an international response and a re-evaluation of how the world manages wildfires.
Today, we talk to firefighters on the front lines about the enormity of their challenge.
And to climate columnist David Wallace-Wells about how, thanks to climate change, the very nature of the danger from wildfires is shifting.
It's Friday, August 4th.
My name is Ben Oakley.
I'm 43 years old.
I'm the system-based manager with the Boise BLM Smoke Jumpers.
I've been in wildland fires since 2000. My name is Cole Wieland. I'm a senior smokejumper for Boise Bureau of Land Management.
So we're an initial attack resource that responds to usually remote lightning fires by airplane and parachute. My name's Ash Mora.
I'm a flight aviation specialist with the New South Wales Royal Flight Service based
here in Sydney.
So I'm Jake Meary.
I work with the Alaska Smokejumpers.
I'm 31 years old.
I started fire when I was 19, right out of high school, and currently on a wildfire right now.
You know, we started hearing about Canada in June.
We went up there for a total of 19 days, and there was probably another 30 smokejumpers
from the other bases that were up there during my time as well.
So I was there for 14 operational periods.
Yeah, they need kind of all hands on deck, really.
There was, you know, a lot of international aid.
And I think there's like French and South African.
When we got to Edmonton, we were briefed on our individual assignments.
From there, we were kitted out with all the equipment we needed
and basically began working as soon as we got there.
You know, we all kind of have our duties and our roles.
There's people that operate chainsaws
and there's other people that man the pump and hose
and then hand tools.
And then another thing in Canada,
they have a lot of access to helicopters and air resources
because a lot of that stuff is pretty remote.
It did look quite confronting when we arrived to our fire. You're talking enormous plumes of smoke.
You can see flames right up through the air.
And usually if you can see flame from the air when you're flying, that means it's pretty
intense on the ground.
The fire itself, from flying where we were, you could nearly go as far as the eye can
see. One of the surprising things is how vast British Columbia is.
Just fire or burnt country right across the landscape.
You can say anywhere from like 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., 6 p.m. is kind of when the fire would pick up and kind of stand up and move.
It's so dry and windy that it's, you know, burning the grass right over a swamp.
You know, the grass is burning right on top of the water, which is pretty wild to see.
I ended up jumping a fire that went pretty big.
So I spent like 11 days on one fire and it was kind of chaos.
It was really volatile, burning really quick.
And, you know, the fire kept throwing spots, you know, hot embers into unburned fuels.
And we were just running around trying to contain them all.
It was right along the Alaska-Canadian Highway. So that was the main
resource we were trying to protect just because it's kind of the bloodline for northern Canada
and up to Alaska. And yeah, we were just pulling long shifts, 20-hour shifts, 18-hour shifts,
17-hour shifts back to 20, trying to contain it. And I think it was on day 10, we finally got all the way around the fire.
The line held, which is really nice because there's a lot of chaotic days, you know, where it was so short staffed.
We just were kind of barely holding on to it, just keeping it at ease.
It's such a vast area up there and they're so big and they're growing at such a rate.
At that point, sometimes it's an even-lost cause and then you're going to need what we
call a season-ending event and that's going to require the turn of the season, rain and
snow to actually put it out.
to actually put it out.
With how much activity that they had up there, they could have had every firefighter in the world up there
and it still wouldn't have been enough to help
just with how much activity and how much, you know,
how much fire is burning up there right now. So David, the last time you and I spoke, it was about the smoke that was covering huge parts of the United States.
At the time, you know, New York City was this kind of angry orange color.
And, of course, it had come from forest fires in Canada, which continue today to burn out of control.
continue today to burn out of control. So after that show, my colleagues Carlos Prieto and Asa Chaturvedi started calling firefighters who were fighting fires in Canada. And I wanted to ask you
the same question my colleagues put to these firefighters, which is, how do we finally put
these fires out? Well, the truth is, we've never been able to put fires like this out ever.
Even in California, where we have the most advanced wildland firefighting system anywhere in the world, even there when a fire is burning totally out of control, firefighters just can't get in the way of that.
They can't extinguish those fires at all.
The flames themselves are moving too fast.
The fires are burning too hot.
When you get into a situation like that, really the best that firefighters can do is to try to
work on the margins, to direct the path of the fire away from human settlements, and to wait for
the winds to change. And in British Columbia, which is the kind of equivalent state of California in
Canada, they have less than one-tenth the budget of Cal Fire. And they've got a fraction of the firefighters. So even in the place in the world where we can
do the best, we can't manage truly disastrous fires. We can't extinguish them. We certainly
can't do that in Canada where the resources are much, much smaller. And what's the size of the
fire at this point there in Canada? So in total, we've seen across Canada something like 30 million acres
burn. 30 million acres? It's unbelievably large. It's about three times as much land as has burned
in the worst American fire seasons of the last 50 years. Holy. And we still have a few months of fire
season ahead of us, which means we may well get to 40 million or even 50 million by the time
the year is over.
And you already have a lot of Canadian fire scientists saying the climate has changed sufficiently
that we can't even really expect that the rainy season will totally bring this to an end.
So we don't know when these fires are really going to go out, but already they are literally off the charts.
They are chart redefining.
Wow, the scale of it is just mind-blowing.
So if you can't put them out, if they're wild and completely out of control as they are,
I guess the question is, what can you do?
Like, what's the strategy?
Well, if you put yourself in the shoes of someone who's trying to allocate scarce resources
to deal with an overwhelming threat, you prioritize what you're going to defend.
And that's basically what the Canadians have done.
It's also what we've done in a lot of places in the U.S. in recent years, which is to say,
we focus on human lives, make sure that we can save them and protect them. We focus secondarily
on homes, you know, towns, make sure that fires don't destroy whole communities. And then as a
third level, we try to focus on protecting human infrastructure, rail lines, power lines, other sorts of things that we don't want to get destroyed by fire.
But it is really important, I think, to understand in thinking about this challenge just how large and vast and mostly uninhabited most of Canada is and how much of it is really untouched forest. I think it's 85% of Canadians live within 150 miles of the U.S. border,
which is the equivalent of 85% of Americans living south of Los Angeles and south of Tampa.
And then you have this untouched landscape to the north.
And when you're talking about allocating scarce resources,
it's obvious that you want to focus on protecting the people where they're densely populated.
And really, as strange as it may sound, as counterintuitive as it may sound,
let the rest of the country burn. Wow. So letting the forest burn is, in fact, the strategy,
which is not exactly intuitive, as you say. How did we get to this idea of how to manage fire?
Well, it came out of the realization that we took the wrong approach for most of the 20th century, extinguishing fire wherever it crept up. We had this kind of a daredevil response where we'd send in mostly
young men into areas even where we knew the fire was going to burn out of control and try to
extinguish it whenever we could. We risked a lot of lives to do that. We suppressed fire really
successfully, but it also meant as a result that because there was less fire, the landscape itself grew more and more flammable over time.
In a natural world untouched by this kind of firefighting, there would be occasional small-scale fires that thinned out dry timber.
But if we put out all those fires and those burns don't happen, the tinder just accumulates larger and larger.
don't happen, the tinder just accumulates larger and larger. And that means that when an ignition finally happens, the fire that results can burn much, much larger and as a result, much more
intensely because there's just so much more of that fuel on the ground. But about 30, 40, 50 years
ago, there was a sort of a change in perspective on exactly how to approach these challenges.
And now most firefighters almost everywhere in the world take a very different approach. Rather than trying to put out fire wherever it burns, they focus on protecting human life when they can and human communities where they can.
And otherwise, they try to cultivate what they call good fire.
Good fire.
Yeah. Good fire is fire that thins out forests that is already ready to
burn. As a result, it can allow those forests to regenerate. It's part of the natural cycle for
many of these forests to go through some amount of burning. And it can also protect against future
out-of-control catastrophic fires because once an area of land is burned, it was often thought that
it would take a very long time for it to burn again. And in the meantime, that burned area would act as a natural firebreak so that if a future fire
broke out a mile down the road, it wouldn't actually cross that burned over area. It would
stay contained within the boundaries of what had already burned. And in addition to letting those
fires burn to produce that effect, firefighters have also tried to introduce their own good fire through what's called
controlled burning, which is where, given the right weather conditions, you kind of
set up an area and light it on fire, knowing that there aren't going to be high wind days,
knowing that you've built up particular fire breaks in certain areas so that you know that
the fire that will result will be contained.
It's not foolproof.
There have been mistakes made here,
and there have been some really quite large fires that emerged from controlled burns.
But in general, it's understood that this has been a healthier approach
to forest management and fire policy.
Okay, so the idea was to limit the amount of fuel for a potential wildfire
before it started through these controlled burns
to kind of lower the chance
of an out-of-control fire in the future. And also that once a fire does start, to stop it from
burning near towns and cities. So that's what the firefighters are doing up there right now. They're
protecting people, right? Kind of like a defending army or something.
Yeah. And I think they've done a relatively good job of that, given how much of Canada is burning. We've seen a few fatalities, but it's not been a high number. We haven't seen
whole towns incinerated like we've seen in previous fire seasons in Canada or the U.S.
And, you know, we've seen a massive amount of land burn. And that's sort of reflective of the
strategy. So according to the lessons that we thought we learned over the last 30, 40 years,
things are basically going according to plan here.
The problem is, these fires in Canada are showing us that there are unforeseen costs to that strategy.
And the lessons that we thought we learned over those previous generations
simply don't apply to the climate reality as it exists today.
And managing fire is becoming a much riskier proposition.
We'll be right back.
Okay, so David, walk me through the way that climate change is scrambling our thinking about fires.
Well, the most basic level is just that because there is more heat and often less moisture, forests in much of the world are becoming more flammable.
So that means that they are burning more regularly.
And when they burn, they often burn more intensely, which is to say they have higher temperatures. You can't even
drop water on some of them from airplanes that are designed to extinguish them because the water
will actually evaporate before it even reaches the fire. You have it burning so hot that the
silica in the soil can turn into glass. And you have this whole new phenomenon of fire weather.
We used to use the word fire weather to describe when a fire was likely to start.
Now we use it to describe the fact
that whole weather systems are produced
by the convective heat produced by fires.
And so you have fire tornadoes, fire lightning storms.
You have these particular kinds of clouds,
which can rise all the way up into the stratosphere,
producing new fire conditions over much larger
areas. So we're living under a completely different set of climate conditions in terms of
the fires that start, when they start, and how far they can burn, and then also the
character and quality of the fire when they are burning.
Okay, so fire tornadoes, huge fire clouds. What other new phenomenon are we seeing now?
Well, a lot of stuff is changing. One of the things that scares me most is something that's often called a zombie fire,
where a fire can seem extinguished on the surface, especially as the fall goes into winter,
but it actually burns in the soil and springs up again in the spring.
So kind of sneak attack.
Exactly.
And this has happened a lot in Siberia.
It's happened in the American West, too.
And we don't really know how much more common that's going to be. I mean, a zombie fire,
by definition, scary. Undead fires. And we're also seeing some other concerning phenomenon.
So we used to believe that once an area had burned, it would take quite a long time for it
to recover sufficiently to burn again. It might be a 10-year horizon, it might be a 30-year horizon,
but now we're seeing increasingly in certain areas,
even just a few years after a previous bad fire,
a new fire coming in and burning once more.
So we used to feel, for all of its horror and tragedy,
that a massive wildfire at least protected that land
for basically a generation.
And now it seems much, much less safe
to count on that
generational buffer. So how does all of this change the calculus on fire management?
Well, on a practical level, it means that you can't do controlled burns as aggressively as
you might have wanted to do. The number of days in which conditions are comfortable for burning are many fewer,
and the risks of things getting out of control are higher.
It's also the case that letting a natural fire continue to burn
runs a risk of it growing much larger and more intense
than would have been the case a generation ago,
because it's going to just find more fuel on the landscape than was the case back then.
And the impact of that is twofold.
And I think these are things that we've only just started to really reckon with.
The first is about smoke. We've only started to think about the public health risks of
wildfire smoke over the last few years. And it's one thing to say what we're trying to do is to
protect human life when we
define human life as the person standing in the path of fire and think, what can we do to protect
that person? And it's another thing to think we need to do what we can to protect human life
when the human lives that we're trying to protect are the many millions of people living hundreds
of miles away who may breathe in that smoke. In the first instance, it's kind of okay to let good fire burn if no one's in the way.
In the second instance, letting more land burn is going to produce more smoke, which
is going to ultimately affect more people.
And it's not just smoke.
It's also carbon, because trees, when they burn, release carbon as reliably as burning
a piece of coal does.
And the effects there at the global level are not enormous,
but in particular bad fire seasons, they can be really, really catastrophic.
In Canada this year, they're producing two or three times as much emissions
as the entire Canadian economy.
All of its infrastructure, all of its energy systems, all of its transportation,
all of its agriculture, all of its factories, all of its energy systems, all of its transportation, all of its agriculture, all of its factories, all of its cars, more carbon is being produced by wildfires this
year in Canada than all of those other sources combined.
So that's the scale of the carbon problem produced by fires.
And we're just beginning, I think, to even think about it.
And we're very far from getting a policy or cultural hold on it.
I mean, it's startling, right? I mean, just to repeat, so people actually absorb this,
the emissions from fires this season in Canada are two or three times as much as the emissions
as the entire Canadian economy, which is just like the scale is unimaginable and depressing.
So what's the cost of this let it burn strategy globally?
Recent years, there have been estimates that the emissions from wildfires are larger than
the national emissions of all countries except China, the United States, and India, which is to
say if wildfires were a country, they would be the world's fourth biggest emitter. And it means that if you're casting your mind forward a generation or two into a world in which we've
actually done a remarkably rapid job of decarbonization and are not producing very much
or any additional carbon emissions, we still may be dealing with future heating, future global
warming, just from the effects of wildfire continuing to burn at higher and higher levels and producing more and more carbon.
So the cost of not putting out these fires, you know, doing the good burn thing, is really starting to add up.
What options do we actually have when we think about forest fire management and how we need to change it?
Unfortunately, I don't think there are great options out there.
People talk about the possibility of logging to reduce the fuel load, but of course, logging produces carbon because every time you cut down a tree, it releases that carbon. There are people who want to thin out the forests, but the effort it would take to actually go through these vast landscapes and clear brush is just far beyond anything that we are capable of committing to at this point in a place like the U.S. or Canada and really anywhere in the world. We may want to try cultivating different
kinds of regrowth in areas where trees have already burned, but the truth is we've proven
pretty bad at growing things like tree plantations to this point, and so I don't know how much stock
to put into that. I think most fire scientists would tell you that the things that we've been
doing over the last 20 or 30 years are still the best options we have.
They're just coming with much higher side effects and secondary costs than we appreciated at the time.
We probably want to be doing more controlled burns because if you conduct a genuinely controlled burn, the fire burns at a lower heat.
It produces maybe, in some cases, slightly lower carbon emissions, certainly less
smoke. And you can prevent really out-of-control fires from occurring in the future. But we're
still going to be dealing with a landscape that is much, much more flammable. And when those
ignitions do come, larger areas are going to burn. They're going to burn more intensely. They're
going to produce more smoke. And they're going to produce a whole lot of carbon emissions. So even doing a very aggressive forest management approach doesn't leave us in a safe place when it comes to
forest fire. And the more that we know about these secondary costs, the scarier that future may seem.
So basically pretty thin gruel in terms of options. And as you said, you know, it took
decades to come up with our current strategy. So all of this is really going to take time.
So what are we facing then?
I mean, what does our medium term actually look like?
Well, I think the short answer is that it's a future that has a lot more fire in it.
And we used to think about fire management in terms of protecting people.
And I think we're going to grow increasingly concerned about the risk from smoke and from carbon emissions. But there isn't an easy answer to those things, which means we're going to be living in a quite different relationship with nature than we've developed over the past half century or several centuries, depending on how you want to count.
to be tempting for people like me, for people worried about the climate, to think that, well,
if the world really got together, we could get a handle on this problem. If we really invested and focused on decarbonization, we could eliminate carbon emissions and solve global warming. And
if we really focused on adaptation measures, we could protect people against what was coming as
a result of the stuff we'd already put into the atmosphere to this point. But I think the lesson of the new age of wildfire is that we have much less control over a lot of these forces
than we'd like to tell ourselves. So one lesson here when thinking about all of this is maybe we
can't manage the natural world like we used to, and especially fires. Like we used to think we
can control them or at least manage them. And now they are
controlling us. They have the upper hand. And that is such a basic promise of the modern age
of the last century, that if we chose to, we could control nature. We were more powerful than it,
and we could hold it at bay and minimize its threats over time.
Climate change is unfortunately undoing a lot of that,
making that promise and that expectation much more ragged.
And we may end up in a future 50 years from now or 100 years from now where we've gotten a better sense of the lay of the land
and can introduce new rules, new patterns, new approaches.
But for now, I think we're going to be living in a kind of a complicated, difficult, in certain ways dangerous relationship with the natural world as it responds to the changes that we've made inevitable in it.
And so we're going to have to develop a whole new set of expectations and a whole new set of approaches to allow us to live in a climate regime we're just beginning to understand.
David, thank you.
Thank you.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back. Trump appeared in a courthouse in Washington and stood before a federal magistrate judge who ordered him not to communicate about the case with any witnesses and set the date for the case's first hearing in front of a trial judge for August 28th.
It was the third time in four months that Trump stood before a judge on criminal charges. But it was the most momentous, the beginning of what prosecutors say should be a reckoning for his many efforts to undermine one of the core tenets of democracy.
Today's episode was produced by Asta Chaturvedi and Carlos Prieto, with help from Will Reed.
It was edited by Michael Benoit, Fact-checked by Susan Lee.
Contains original music by Dan Powell and Marian Lozano.
And was engineered by Chris Wood.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
Special thanks to Jungho Kim.
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See you on Monday. Thank you.