Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumUS Forest Service Feeling Strain Of Record 2015 Season; 13 Firefighter Deaths, Insufficient Funding
The U.S. Forest Service has warned it is at the tipping point of a crisis in dealing with escalating wildfires and diseases that are ravaging Americas increasingly fragile forest ecosystems. The federal agency, which manages 193 million acres of forest, will plead once again for more funding from Congress, in the wake of a devastating 2015 that saw record swaths of forest engulfed in flames.
A total of 10.1 million acres were burned last year, a figure that is double the typical losses seen 30 years ago. During this time, the average fire season in the U.S. has lengthened by 78 days, with scientists predicting that the amount of forest razed by fire will double by 2050. Climate change-driven drought, wildfire and invasive diseases are stretching the U.S. Forest Service to breaking point, the agency has warned. It spent about 65 percent of its $5 billion budget dealing with wildfires last year and is requesting that fire be treated like other natural disasters so that it is able to access more money to keep pace.
We are seeing real challenges on the ground climate change is real and it is with us, Robert Bonnie, under secretary for natural resources and environment at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, told the Guardian. The whole U.S. Forest Service is shifting to becoming an agency dominated by wildfires. We really are at a tipping point. The current situation is not sustainable.
Bonnie said the growing conflagration of Americas forests means the U.S. Forest Service has had to divert resources from other areas, such as the kind of forest restoration that helps prevent future wildfires. Attempts to remedy this situation with a new disaster fund were dashed when it was not included in the federal budget in December.
EDIT
http://www.climatecentral.org/news/forest-service-stretched-after-record-wildfires-20012
BlueMTexpat
(15,369 posts)I have nothing but admiration for those brave fightfighters who gave everything - in some cases their all - fighting fires.
One late BIL was a smokejumper for many years. He received many injuries but survived those experiences only to be cut down by cancer.
Having to deal with "patriots" like the Bundy group in OR has got to have added strain to the USFS budget as well.
Turbineguy
(37,338 posts)privatized to protect the forest from republicans and arsonists (is that a tautology?).