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The West is coming off the most expensive wildfire season ever. Federal agencies alone are expected to spend upwards of $2 billion dollars on suppressing fires in 2015 and an estimated 2,500 homes were lost. This year, the US Forest Service spent more than half its budget on firefighting. That’s up from 16 percent only 20 years ago. This trend has been on the rise since the mid-1990s and continues to pick up steam.What’s going on? And what can be done about it?In this three-part collaboration with the journalism non-profit InvestigateWest, JPR’s Liam Moriarty takes a look at the causes of -- and some possible solutions to -- the wildfire conundrum.

The Wildfire Conundrum: The Climate Effect

Conventional wisdom says forests in the West are overstocked and need to be thinned to prevent “catastrophic” wildfires. But some researchers say focusing on reducing fuels downplays a greater and growing driver of wildfire: climate change.

When I visit Darren Borgias at his office in Medford, he shows me a colorful poster that illustrates what the ideal dry, southwestern Oregon forest looks like. And historically, he says, this ecosystem was nurtured and maintained by fire.

Darren Borgias: “What we’ve lost, over a hundred years of fire exclusion, is the portion of the landscape that supported open, sun-dappled woodland and forest.”

Borgias is with the non-profit Nature Conservancy. He says putting fire back to work on the landscape is a key part of a restorative approach to forestry.

Darren Borgias: “We’re setting the stage for the return of fire. To a large extent, we anticipate that’s going to be planned, controlled burns, conducted at times when we have the highest certainty that we’ll get the outcomes that we need and that the burn can be conducted safely.”

The Nature Conservancy is one of several partners in a ten-year program to restore ecological balance to nearly 8-thousand acres of mountain forest next to Ashland, Oregon. By thinning excess growth that historically would have been cleared out by natural forest fires, the project hopes to head off a severe fire that could endanger the town’s water supply, as well as its tourist economy. Borgias says the same principles could be scaled up to apply across larger landscapes – for instance, the Rogue Basin.

Darren Borgias: “We have a draft strategy out now that shows about 2.1 million acres that should be treated for a variety of reasons and for a variety of objectives.”

This idea has gained wide currency, and the US Forest Service has identified tens of millions of acres across the West as needing treatment.

 But some researchers aren’t sold on this model. Dominick Dellasala is chief scientist at the Ashland-based Geos Institute, a non-profit that deals with climate change. Dellasala agrees that fire is a crucial element in maintaining healthy forests. But, he says, the data don’t support the idea that a buildup of forest fuels is the problem.

Dominick Dellasala: “If fuels were contributing to more forest fires and more severe fires, that’s what we would be seeing in the West. We are actually in a deficit of fire severity and fire acres in most of the West compared to historical times.”

Dellasala points to records that show the number of acres burned in the  West in the early 20th century was as high or higher than in recent years. Those numbers dipped mid-century, then started picking back up in the 1980s. Levels now are back on par with those of a hundred years ago. What’s different, he says …

Dominick Dellasala: “We now have a climate signal that’s driving fire behavior. More and more fires are responding to climate; extreme weather events, drought, high winds, high temperatures. That is going to override any fuel treatments that we do on the ground.

Rather than try to reduce fire across the landscape, Dellasala says we should learn to co-exist with it.

Dominick Dellasala: “Co-existence involves letting more of these fires safely burn in the backcountry, and focusing on protecting lives and homes. Logging in the backcountry does not help.”

Dellasala notes that using fire-resistant building materials and clearing trees and brush from around a house improves the odds of it surviving even a severe fire to better than 90 percent ... He says co-existence with fire also means thinking twice about where we build.

Dominick Dellasala: “Just like we don’t build on top of a volcano, or we don’t build in a flood plain, we need to really look at some tighter land use restrictions, because we’re setting people up, and homes up, for future fire effects.”

Wildfires may not be at historic high levels, but the cost of fighting them certainly is. For the first time ever, this year, the Forest Service spent more than half its budget on firefighting. And one main driver of that expense is the need to protect lives and property as development pushes further into the woods. 

Liam Moriarty has been covering news in the Pacific Northwest for three decades. He served two stints as JPR News Director and retired full-time from JPR at the end of 2021. Liam now edits and curates the news on JPR's website and digital platforms.