United States: In California, we need to fight fire with fire

September 17, 2020
Issue 

In more than 20 years of living in Southern California, I have never been in a potential fire evacuation zone 鈥 until now.

The entire state is seemingly on fire with a , with months to go before the end of fire season. The situation is so dire that the state鈥檚 fire officials are warning they 鈥渟imply do not have enough resources to fully fight and contain every fire.鈥 Fires are burning from the , and tens of thousands of Californians are under evacuation orders. While fire is normal in California, the sort of out-of-control wildfires that spread rapidly and burn ferociously every few weeks are neither natural nor inevitable. Most importantly, there are long-term solutions available if we would only implement them.

Blame

Currently, media and public focus is on how the fires begin, as if wiping out every source will solve the underlying problems of a perfect storm of fire-ready conditions.

A on one of the hottest days of the year that relied on pyrotechnics to reveal the gender of an anticipated baby set off what is being called the El Dorado Fire. That fire burned more than 40 square kilometres in an area about 112 kilometres east of Los Angeles. Although there has been much-deserved vitriol aimed the perpetrators and at , the fact is conditions are perfect for massive wildfires and it matters little what sparks them.

In California鈥檚 Bay area, more than 10,000 triggered hundreds of fires in August. In November 2018, the burned more than 600 square kilometres and killed dozens of people, wiping out the retirement community of Paradise. The devastating Camp Fire was sparked by the utility company Pacific Gas and Electric鈥檚 faulty power lines.

Unless long-term actions are taken to address the conditions under which such fires burn, the causes of future fires could be illegal fireworks, an unauthorised barbecue or even a spark from a cigarette. The more pressing matter is why there are conditions for such extreme fires in the first place.

Climate change is one of the culprits. Wetter weather earlier in the year results in greater brush growth which then dries out when hotter-than-usual weather later in the year turns it into fuel. that 鈥渁 much greater number of extremely wet and extremely dry weather seasons鈥, will 鈥渉ave a major effect on the lives of Californians鈥.

The other culprit is the abundance of fuel in a state that has always had wildfires.

Ali Meders-Knight is a Mechoopda tribal member from Chico in the northern part of California. For more than 20 years, she has practiced what is now called (TEK) and has worked as a liaison for tribal forestry programs addressing precisely the problem of California鈥檚 mismanaged land and fuel that end up giving rise to out-of-control deadly fires. In an , she explained to me that 鈥渢he plants and the land are adapted to fire. [The area is] used to fire; it wants fire.鈥

explained that 鈥淎 鈥榩ut out every fire鈥 approach to wildland fire management for decades has left us with a fire deficit which can fuel unusually big, hot fires.鈥 has evolved based on a cycle of periodic fires that certain species of wildlife and flora depend upon. But Western colonisation of the state resulted in the wiping out of Indigenous knowledge of fire management. According to Meders-Knight, 鈥測ou have the option of having a little bit of fire, or a whole lot of fire. But you never have the option of having no fire鈥.

California Senator Dianne Feinstein has taken the lead on fuel management in the state but has done so in an entirely wrong-headed fashion. to 鈥減rotect communities from wildfires鈥, the Democratic senator鈥檚 bill was apparently meant to, 鈥渋mprove management and speed up restoration of forest landscapes in California鈥. But in reality, it offers a that has been part of the problem in the first place.

Greenpeace summarised that: 鈥淗eavy-handed fire suppression is strongly supported by the logging industry whose spokespersons now, ironically, call for more aggressive logging to remedy the mistake they helped perpetrate in our forests for decades.鈥 Meders-Knight denounced Feinstein鈥檚 bill as 鈥減rimitive鈥, 鈥渆xtremely uneducated鈥, and akin to 鈥渄isaster capitalism鈥. The logging industry is interested only in tearing down trees for profit and has no interest or expertise in land management and restoration, or watershed management.

Indigenous fire management

For decades, the state banned the in California. Now, Meders-Knight is part of a new generation of tribal leaders training and certifying people in the Indigenous wisdom that for generations informed the management of wildfires. In a nutshell, the idea is to fight fire with fire鈥 literally. The training begins with identifying and understanding the state鈥檚 natural flora and fauna and the role each species play in the ecosystem. Indigenous fire management uses controlled fires to manage fuel that has built up, but such fires are not implemented during the hottest part of the year. Rather, they are done during slightly wetter seasons when winds are also low.

How would such ancient technology work in our modern setting? Meders-Knight explained that the optimal days for controlled fire burns are hard to predict weeks or months in advance, which means that the state鈥檚 permitting process needs to be far more flexible. And firefighters, whose job it is to put out every fire during the hottest months of the year, could be trained as 鈥渇ire technicians鈥 to manage fire in other months鈥攖hereby making their jobs less dangerous and overwhelming than they are now. She sees this as a 鈥渨orkforce development initiative鈥 that could be part of a 鈥済reen jobs鈥 project in the state, especially at a time of mass unemployment and a housing crisis. who are recruited to fight California鈥檚 fires could also benefit from such a program.

What is remarkable is that Indigenous techniques of firefighting could also help mitigate climate change. In Australia, similar Aboriginal technology for fighting wildfires has already been implemented on a small scale. The program has proven invaluable for the short-term goal of reducing deadly fires, and the long-term goal of reducing carbon emissions that fuel global warming. According to the , 鈥渁n Aboriginal burning program started seven years ago has cut hot and destructive wildfires in half and reduced carbon emissions by more than 40 percent.鈥 Just as in California, 鈥渋n Australia, fire was a crucial tool in managing the land before the arrival of Europeans鈥.

The solutions to California鈥檚 horrendous and deadly fires have been around for centuries. It is not inevitable for the world鈥檚 to succumb to the devastation of deadly fires. The difference between Feinstein鈥檚 approach to fire management and Indigenous fire technology is that the former has simply not worked, and is based on a Western capitalist, profit-based model of short-term financial gains by an extractive industry. Meanwhile, the latter approach is grounded in painstaking work that does not inflate a corporate bottom line and instead results in a collective benefit to the state鈥檚 inhabitants. What path will we choose?

[This article was produced by , a project of the Independent Media Institute. Sonali Kolhatkar is the founder, host and executive producer of a television and radio show that airs on Free Speech TV and Pacifica.]

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