Forest Fires and Adaptation Options in Europe
This paper presents a quantitative assessment
of adaptation options in the context of forest fires in Europe
under projected climate change. A standalone fire model
(SFM) based on a state-of-the-art large-scale forest fire
modelling algorithm is used to explore fuel removal
through prescribed burnings and improved fire suppression
as adaptation options. The climate change projections are
provided by three climate models reflecting the SRES A2
scenario. The SFM’s modelled burned areas for selected
test countries in Europe show satisfying agreement with
observed data coming from two different sources (European
Forest Fire Information System and Global Fire
Emissions Database). Our estimation of the potential
increase in burned areas in Europe under ‘‘no adaptation’’
scenario is about 200 % by 2090 (compared with
2000–2008). The application of prescribed burnings has the
potential to keep that increase below 50 %. Improvements
in fire suppression might reduce this impact even further,
e.g. boosting the probability of putting out a fire within a
day by 10 % would result in about a 30 % decrease in
annual burned areas. By taking more adaptation options
into consideration, such as using agricultural fields as fire
breaks, behavioural changes, and long-term options,
burned areas can be potentially reduced further than projected
in our analysis.
KHABAROV Nikolay;
KRASOVSKII Andrey;
OBERSTEINER Michael;
SWART Rob;
DOSIO Alessandro;
SAN-MIGUEL-AYANZ Jesus;
DURRANT Tracy;
CAMIA Andrea;
MIGLIAVACCA M.;
2014-09-10
SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
JRC84423
1436-3798,
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10113-014-0621-0,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC84423,
10.1007/s10113-014-0621-0,
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