By Gary Morgan, Chief Executive Officer, Bushfire
Cooperative Research Centre
We all knew it could be a bad weekend. With temperatures in
the high 40s and strong northerly winds, any fire that began on the
weekend of the 7-8 February had the potential to grow very rapidly,
travel fast and quickly threaten communities.
It is too early to fully gauge the impact and casues of these
events but we can be sure that the date will be etched in our
history as firmly as Black Friday in 1939 and Ash Wednesday in
1983.
We are the Bushfire CRC extend our deepest sympathies to all
those affected by these bushfires. With so many lives and
properties lost, we are again reminded about how as a community we
must better learn how to live with fire.
As awful as the events of these few weeks are, it is sometimes
difficult to remember that as a community we are better prepared
than we have ever been. We have better technology to fight the
fires and better systems to coordinate resources across multiple
fires. Communities are better informed, both before the fires
arrive and while they are still going, with non-stop media
broadcasting and regular community meetings held in local halls.
Importantly, there is now a far better coordination of all the
state’s emergency services, and other community support
agencies.
However, we have learnt a lot about bushfires but this is often
not enough. Despite all the advances in knowledge, we are still
losing lives and property, and some residents are still not fully
prepared. This is a situation not unique to Australia as recent
devastating fires in North America and southern Europe have shown.
And as the international experience has proved, simply buying more
water-bombing aircraft and other fire fighting resources is not
enough.
When bushfires run under such extreme conditions they are almost
impossible to put out. So it comes down to having communities that
are fully prepared, including mentally and physically, for the
impact of a bushfire.
Climate change and drought are altering the nature, ferocity and
duration of bushfires and an ageing and declining volunteer
population are challenging the way fire agencies are going to be
able to manage these events.
These issues are being made worse by the expanding rural-urban
edge in our cities and regional towns. The fires on the suburban
outskirts of Bendigo and Narre Warren on the Saturday show that we
need to rethink our notion of who lives in a bushfire zone and who
needs to be educated and prepared.
Our research has consistently shown that fleeing at the last
moment is the worst possible option; this is the where most
people have died or been injured. Sadly, this message does
not seem to have been sufficiently heeded this weekend with truly
awful consequences in Victoria. History and research both show that
in past fires this has not been a safe option and that a properly
prepared house that is actively defended is a safe place to be.
Alternatively, many people made the perfectly acceptable
decision that their house was not defendable and decided to leave
early. They may have lost their home but they kept themselves
safe.
These fires show that we still need to know more, especially
about:
- The education of communities that are not getting the
fire-safety messages
- How and why these fires start
- Why some houses catch fire and others don’t
- Extreme fire behaviour
- How we prepare the land and our homes for fire
- How we better protect essential infrastructure and
industry.
The world is watching us over these past few weeks and will
continue to do so. We have already been contacted by many
colleagues in the US and in Europe who each year also grapple with
the same issues as us. They want to know how we are dealing with
these mega-fires – fires that seem to defy fire-fighting
efforts and quickly threaten communities. The world-leading
expertise that we are building in Australia is being combined with
that from other countries.
All the research is telling us that a hotter and drier climate
in these areas of the world is greatly increasing the potential for
more bushfires and these events may not be as extraordinary as we
like to think.
We need to be watching closely for what went right as well as
what went wrong – so as a nation we can learn to better deal
with this ongoing threat.
(This article first appeared in the Autumn 2009 issue
of Fire Australia magazine.)