In News
- The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) called on global governments to adopt a new ‘Fire Ready Formula,’ as it warned that incidences of wildfires would rise in the future.
About the report
- Publisher
- The report is released by UNEP jointly with non-profit GRID-Arendal.
- Objective
- The UNEP has called for strengthening international and regional cooperation on wildfires.
- Development of an international standard for wildfire management has also been recommended.
- Spending
- The new formula envisages that 66 percent of spending be devoted to planning, prevention, preparedness and recovery.
- The remaining 34 per cent can be spent on response.
- Spike
- The UNEP report also projected that the number of wildfires is likely to increase by up to 14 per cent by 2030.
- It is projected to spike by 33 per cent by 2050. It would rise by 52 per cent by 2100.
- Budget
- The direct responses to wildfires received over half of related expenditures, while planning and prevention received just 0.2 per cent of the total budget for wildfires.
- Arctic region
- Even the Arctic region, previously all but immune, faces rising wildfire risk.
Significance of the move
- Building capacity: This will facilitate international cooperation and help all wildfire-prone countries build capacity for both domestic application and international assistance.
Causes of Wildfires
- Climate change: The prevalence and behavior of wildfires is changing due to numerous factors including, but not limited to, climate change.
- Wildfires are made worse by climate change through increased drought, high air temperatures, low relative humidity, lightning, and strong winds resulting in hotter, drier, and longer fire seasons.
- Change in land-use and land management practices: are also responsible for the increasing risks of wildfires.
- Anthropogenic Factors:
- Dropping a burning matchstick, torchwood or a bidi/cigarette.
- A spark can also be produced when dry pine needles or leaves fall on an electric pole.
- When temporarily built hearths are left behind with fire, they can lead to massive forest fires.
- Sometimes the fire spreads to the adjoining forest when people burn their fields to clear them of stubble, dry grass or undergrowth.
Issues/ Challenges
- Delay progress: An increase in damaging wildfires may reverse or delay progress towards achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Paris Agreement and Sendai targets.
- The changing scale and intensity of wildfires may especially impact achievements in developing countries, across several of the SDGs that impact human health and well-being.
- These include the SDG goals to end hunger, poverty and the goal on climate action too.
- The true cost of wildfires, financial, social, and environmental, extends for days, weeks, and even years after the flames subside.
- Money in the wrong place: Current government responses to wildfires are often putting money in the wrong place.
- Poorest nations: Wildfires disproportionately affect the world’s poorest nations.
- People’s health is directly affected by inhaling wildfire smoke, causing respiratory and cardiovascular impacts and increased health effects for the most vulnerable.
- The economic costs of rebuilding after areas are struck by wildfires can be beyond the means of low-income countries.
- Watersheds are degraded by wildfires’ pollutants; they also can lead to soil erosion causing more problems for waterways.
- Wastes left behind are often highly contaminated and require appropriate disposal.
- Wildlife and its natural habitats are rarely spared from wildfires, pushing some animal and plant species closer to extinction.
Suggestions/ Way Forward
- There is a need to invest more in fire risk reduction, work with local communities and strengthen global commitment to fight climate change.
- Achieving and sustaining adaptive land and fire management requires a combination of policies, a legal framework and incentives that encourage appropriate land and fire use.
- Governments are called to radically shift their investments in wildfires to focus on prevention and preparedness.
- It calls for a combination of data and science-based monitoring systems with indigenous knowledge and for stronger regional and international cooperation.
- Those emergency service workers and fire-fighters on the frontlines who are risking their lives to fight forest wildfires need to be supported.
- The restoration of ecosystems is an important avenue to mitigate the risk of wildfires before they occur and to build back better in their aftermath.
- The Fire Ready Formula could help in achieving these goals.
UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration
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Source: DTE
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