| Literature DB >> 27216511 |
Rob Gazzard1, Julia McMorrow2, Jonathan Aylen3.
Abstract
Severe wildfires are an intermittent problem in England. The paper presents the first analysis of wildfire policy, showing its halting evolution over two decades. First efforts to coordinate wildfire management came from local fire operation groups, where stakeholders such as fire services, land owners and amenity groups shared knowledge and equipment to tackle the problem. A variety of structures and informal management solutions emerged in response to local needs. Knowledge of wildfire accumulated within regional and national wildfire forums and academic networks. Only later did the need for central emergency planning and the response to climate change produce a national policy response. Fire statistics have allowed wildfires to be spatially evidenced on a national scale only since 2009. National awareness of wildfire was spurred by the 2011 fire season, and the high-impact Swinley Forest fire, which threatened critical infrastructure and communities within 50 miles of London. Severe wildfire was included in the National Risk Register for the first time in 2013. Cross-sector approaches to wildfire proved difficult as government responsibility is fragmented along the hazard chain. Stakeholders such as the Forestry Commission pioneered good practice in adaptive land management to build fire resilience into UK forests. The grass-roots evolution of participatory solutions has also been a key enabling process. A coordinated policy is now needed to identify best practice and to promote understanding of the role of fire in the ecosystem.This article is part of a themed issue 'The interaction of fire and mankind'.Entities:
Keywords: adaptation; emergency planning; fire and rescue service; forestry; rural–urban interface; wildfire risk
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27216511 PMCID: PMC4874416 DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2015.0341
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8436 Impact factor: 6.237
Figure 1.Distribution of vegetation fires recorded in the Incident Recording System for England by size class, financial year: 1 April 2011–31 March 2012. (i) Symbols are not directly proportional to fire size; (ii) size classes are as defined in the UK Vegetation Fire Standard; (iii) Incident Recording System data are courtesy of Department for Communities and Local Government.
Structure of wildfire management in England; sectors, key agencies and their contributions to wildfire management.
| sector | organization/agency/group | scale | contributions to wildfire management |
|---|---|---|---|
| Contingency planning | — Cabinet Office Civil Contingency Secretariat | national | — National Risk Assessment and public-facing version, National Risk Register. |
| — Department for Communities and Local Government Resilience and Emergency Planning Directorate | national | — Government department with ownership of wildfire hazard under Civil Contingencies Act 2004—due to change to the Home Office in April 2016 | |
| — Scientific Advisory Group of Experts | national | — Co-opted advice from experts at times of emergency | |
| — Local Resilience Forums based within 39 Police Areas in England; cross-sector category 1 and 2 responders (police, fire, ambulance, etc.) and Local Authority emergency planners | regional | — Community Risk Registers which rank likelihood, impact and risk of ‘forest or moorland fire’ and ‘severe wildfire’ within a five-year period relative to other local risks | |
| Fire | Chief Fire Officers Association, Wildfire Group, National Operations Programme Group | national | — Non-statutory groups working to develop best practice in recording and managing wildfire, e.g. Development of National Operations Programme Group wildfire guidance, and introduction of Firewise communities |
| 49 FRS in England and Wales, managed by regional Fire Authorities, and overseen by the DCLG due to change to the Home Office in April 2016 | regional | Statutory | |
| Environment | DEFRA Wildfire Group, within DEFRA Contingency Planning Team | national | — Advice to Cabinet Office Civil Contingency Secretariat and DCLG's Resilience and Emergency Planning Directorate for National Risk Register |
| Forestry Commission | national to local | — Champion of UK Forestry Standard, and guidelines linked to planning for wildfire in woodland and forests | |
| Met Office | national | — Met Office Fire Severity Index developed for Natural England to regulate public access to statutory Access Land under the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 | |
| Natural England | national to local | — Management plans for statutory protected areas—recent consideration of wildfire risk management | |
| Wildlife and landscape conservation groups: Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), National Trust, Wildlife Trusts, etc. | national to local | — RSPB as a member of former DEFRA Best Practice Burning Group, now Uplands Management Group | |
| Land management community: practitioner associations such as the Moorland Association, the Heather Trust, Game and Wildlife Trust | national to local | — Tacit knowledge and skills in use of prescribed fire for moorland management | |
| Under-represented sectors | Development control planning | regional to local | — National Planning Policy Framework ( |
| Department for Energy and Climate Change | national | — Consultations for Climate Change Risk Assessment and National Adaptation Plan ( | |
| Insurance industry | — Insure land managers against escaped management burns | ||
| Cross-sector | England and Wales Wildfire Forum, Scottish Wildfire Forum | national | — Voluntary advocacy coalitions on wildfire. ‘go-to’ groups advising government Memberships spans all sectors listed above and others including infrastructure (Highways Agency, Network Rail, Ministry of Defence, etc.) |
| Local wildfire groups, also known as Fire Operations Groups | regional and local | — Voluntary partnerships of local stakeholders including FRS, local land owners and managers and government agencies. Share equipment and training, develop Fire Plans | |
| Academic-led initiatives: e.g. | national | — FireBeaters collected data on vegetation fire incidents and carried out research on moorland fire behaviour |
Legislation, policy and plan implications and opportunities for wildfire in England.
| legislation | implications and opportunities for wildfire |
|---|---|
| Civil Contingency Act (2004)a | — National Risk Assessment and National Risk Register to be undertaken by Cabinet Office Civil Contingency Secretariat |
| Fire and Rescue Services Act (2004)b | — Required Fire Authorities required to make provision for the purpose of promoting fire safety in their area |
| Regulatory Reform Order (Fire Safety) (2005)c | — Forestry and agriculture excluded from fire precautions, risk assessment, prevention and other arrangements for preventing wildfire incidents |
| Forestry Act (1967) | — No link to wildfire within the Act |
| Countryside and Rights of Way Act (2000)d | — Powers to restrict or exclude access for the avoidance of risk of fire or danger to the public (§25 (1, 2, 3 and 4)) |
| Wildlife and Countryside Act (1981)e | — Section 28G authorities, such as FRS and government, local authority and agency landowners, have a general duty to take reasonable steps, consistent with the proper exercise of the authority's functions, to further the conservation and enhancement of the flora, fauna or geological or physiographical features by reason of which the location is a Site of Special Scientific Interest |
| Town and Country Planning Act (1990)f | — Defined the need for local authorities to provide structure plans for development as well as development control |
| Water Environment (Water Framework Directive) (England and Wales) Regulations 2003g | — Impact of wildfire on water quality for human consumption |
| Climate Change Act 2008h | — Established a framework to develop an economically credible emissions reduction path. This requires the government to: undertake an assessment, i.e. Climate Change Risk Assessment, and a plan (National Adaptation Plan) to assess the UK's risks from climate change, prepare a strategy to address them, and encourage critical organizations to do the same |
ahttp://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2004/36/contents
bhttp://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2004/21/contents
chttp://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2005/1541/pdfs/uksi_20051541_en.pdf
dhttp://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/fire-severity-index/#?tab=map&fcTime=1444734000&zoom=5&lon=-4.00&lat=55.74
ehttp://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1981/69/contents
fhttp://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1990/8/contents
ghttp://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2003/3242/contents/made
hhttp://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2008/27/contents
ihttps://www.gov.uk/government/publications/national-planning-policy-framework--2
jhttps://www.gov.uk/government/publications/keeping-the-country-running-natural-hazards-and-infrastructure
khttps://www.gov.uk/government/publications/uk-climate-change-risk-assessment-government-report
lhttps://www.gov.uk/government/publications/adapting-to-climate-change-national-adaptation-programme
mhttps://www.cfoa.org.uk/download/4971
nhttp://publications.naturalengland.org.uk/publication/216300
ohttp://www.forestry.gov.uk/ukfs
Figure 2.Puddletown wildfire management zones, Dorset (2013). Forestry Commission England.