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Wildfire risk and hazard: procedures for the first approximation

TLDR
In this paper, the authors developed a risk and hazard model to evaluate wildfire hazard on federal lands and develop information useful in prioritizing where fuels treatments and mitigation measures might be proposed to address significant fire hazard and risk.
Abstract
This report was designed to meet three broad goals: (1) evaluate wildfire hazard on Federal lands; (2) develop information useful in prioritizing where fuels treatments and mitigation measures might be proposed to address significant fire hazard and risk; and (3) develop risk-based performance measures to document the effectiveness of fire management programs. The research effort described in this report is designed to develop, from a strategic view, a first approximation of how fire likelihood and fire intensity influence risk to social, economic, and ecological values at the national scale. The approach uses a quantitative risk framework that approximates expected losses and benefits to highly valued resources from wildfire. Specifically, burn probabilities and intensities are estimated with a fire simulation model and are coupled with spatially explicit data on human and ecological values and fire-effects response functions to estimate the percent loss or benefit. This report describes the main components of the risk framework, including the burn probability models, highly valued resource data, and development of response functions, and illustrates the application to the State of Oregon. The State of Oregon was selected for prototype due to the wide range of variability in ecoregions represented in the state. All of the highly valued resource themes were represented in the mix of developed and natural resources present in the state. National risk and hazard approximation results for the Continental United States are available at the following location: www.fs.fed.us/wwetac/wflc/.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A simulation of probabilistic wildfire risk components for the continental United States

TL;DR: In this paper, a large fire risk assessment system for the contiguous land area of the United States was developed to estimate burn probabilities and fire size distributions using simulated and real weather data.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of recent advances in risk analysis for wildfire management

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of recent advances in quantifying and integrating these individual components of fire risk is presented, and several necessary and fruitful directions for future research and development in wildfire risk analysis are suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Method for Ensemble Wildland Fire Simulation

TL;DR: In this paper, an ensemble simulation system that accounts for uncertainty in long-range weather conditions and two-dimensional wildland fire spread is described, where fuel moisture is expressed based on the energy release component, a US fire danger rating index, and its variation throughout the fire season is modeled using time series analysis of historical weather data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integrated national-scale assessment of wildfire risk to human and ecological values

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a quantitative, geospatial wildfire risk assessment tool, developed in response to demands for improved risk-based decision frameworks, which is intended to facilitate monitoring trends in wildfire risk over time and to develop information useful in prioritizing fuels treatments and mitigation measures.
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