S.E.E. the Science #3: A new social contract for science
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S.E.E. the Science #3: A new social contract for science

FUSEE sees a Wildfire Triad that inalienably links Safety with Ethics and Ecology. Scientific analyses remain the best chronicles of this triad. In this series, we explore crucial articles, analyses, and reports that demonstrate the best in wildland fire research.

In the third post in the S.E.E. The Science series, Letter Burn examines the necessity for science to be in line with the urgency of climate chaos.

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S.E.E. The Science #1: Insights from wildfire science blaze a new path
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S.E.E. The Science #1: Insights from wildfire science blaze a new path

FUSEE sees a Wildfire Triad that inalienably links Safety with Ethics and Ecology. Scientific analyses remain the best chronicles of this triad. In this series, we explore crucial articles, analyses, and reports that demonstrate the best in wildland fire research. Read Letter Burn’s response to “Insights from wildfire science: A resource for fire policy discussions” by Schoennagel et al. January 2016.

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Overton’s Window Opens
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Overton’s Window Opens

The FUSEE street team, Madeline Cowen and myself, have been hard at work here in the north of Scotland, at the venerable Findhorn Foundation intentional spiritual community.  We are here for the Climate Change and Consciousness conference, and we are a bit more than halfway through. Record-breaking Earth Day temperatures were followed immediately by a twelve square mile wildfire, threatening a nearby wind farm. A pall of smoke hung over Findhorn on Tuesday, and fire was on everyone’s mind, if not their lips. Our mission, aside from adding our voice to the chorus, was to bring more balance to the discussion of wildfires, as nearly every presenter used the language or visuals of wildfire destruction in their presentations to paint the dystopian future of runaway climate change.

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Fire Permeable WUI #4: Enforcing the Code
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Fire Permeable WUI #4: Enforcing the Code

Firebrands inundated us in a biting darting wind-driven torrent. We covered our faces with bandanas the best we could. Cinders rapidly burnt through our fire clothes since the Nomex had been washed out ten years ago. Any exposed flesh reported stinging, piercing pain. As the ember blizzard ignited some low lying brush and grass in our safety zone, many of us thought about deploying our fire shelters just to stave off the misery from the cataract of firebrands that sluiced upon us as if it came from, well ..., a firehose. We didn’t get into our fire shelters because we stalwarted one another and enforced the code.

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Carr Fire CATlines: The Environmental Impacts of Bulldozers in Wildfire Suppression
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Carr Fire CATlines: The Environmental Impacts of Bulldozers in Wildfire Suppression

Bulldozer firelines or "CATlines" cause extensive, lasting environmental damage and destroy Native American heritage sites. In the era of climate change, they are rapidly becoming ineffective in stopping wildfire spread during severe weather conditions. The 2018 Carr Fire offers a case study for the kinds of damage caused by catlines whose scars still remain on the landscape.

Check out FUSEE’s video.

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A New Direction for California Wildfire Policy— Working from the Home Outward
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A New Direction for California Wildfire Policy— Working from the Home Outward

Compiled by Douglas Bevington, Forest Director, Environment Now California Program

California’s state policies on wildfire need to change direction. The current policies are failing. They have not effectively protected homes, while they place dramatically increasing pressures on state and local budgets. Moreover, these policies are often based on notions about the role of fire in California’s ecosystems that are not supported by sound science and do not reflect the changing climate. These policies try to alter vast areas of forest in problematic ways through logging, when instead they should be focusing on helping communities safely co-exist with California’s naturally fire-dependent ecosystems by prioritizing effective fire-safety actions for homes and the zone right around them. This new direction—working from the home outward—can save lives and homes, save money, and produce jobs in a strategy that is better for natural ecosystems and the climate.

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The Fire Permeable WUI #2: The WUI must SEE the CHARR
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The Fire Permeable WUI #2: The WUI must SEE the CHARR

Accelerating Global Warming increases the frequency, intensity, distribution, abundance, duration, and severity of wildfire. Already destructive windstorms have created great landscapes of forest debris providing abundant fuel for wildfire. As heat-waves decrease fuel moisture, we expect more lightning storms. We have reaped these firewhirls and the WUI cannot shelter.

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