Tuesday, January 07, 2020

If you want to stop wildfires, put qualified people back in charge of forests

There was a time when Australian foresters kept Australian forests safe and productive.  They maintained access tracks bridges and fire breaks, undertook prescribed burning, cleared flammable litter from the forest floor, cut suckers, manned fire lookouts, and maintained their own fire-fighting crews in decentralized districts.  University-trained professional foresters were supported by tough, experienced rangers who learned their job in the bush.
Almost every advance in bush fire management in Australia, from the science of fire behavior to aerial burning, was thanks to our foresters.  Into the 1980s, they were regarded as international leaders.
To pay for good forest management, sections of the forest were logged, allowing ground space and sunlight for the swift re-growth of new trees.
And those fading die-hards still beating alarm drums about man-made global warming should be reassured — the use of hardwood and softwood timber in power poles, telephone poles, bridges, wharves, posts, sleepers, hay sheds, and houses provided long-term sequestration of the dreaded carbon.  Moreover, growing trees extract CO2 more quickly than mature trees.  Win, win, win.  

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