Fire consuming more of world’s forests, threatening wood, paper supplies

Climate change is a major driver of fire weather and fire behavior. The increased risk of high-severity wildfire is an entirely expected outcome of warmer temperatures and, in some places, reduced rainfall. File Photo courtesy of U.S. Forest Service -- Pacific Northwest Region/UPI
Climate change is a major driver of fire weather and fire behavior. The increased risk of high-severity wildfire is an entirely expected outcome of warmer temperatures and, in some places, reduced rainfall. File Photo courtesy of U.S. Forest Service -- Pacific Northwest Region/UPI

Nov. 14 (UPI) -- A third of the world's forests are cut for timber. This generates $1.5 trillion annually. But wildfire threatens industries such as timber milling and paper manufacturing, and the threat is far greater than most people realize.

Our research, published Monday in the journal Nature Geoscience, shows that between 2001 and 2021, severe wildfires worldwide destroyed timber-producing forests equivalent to an area the size of Great Britain. Severe fires reach the tree tops and consume the forest canopy.

The amount of timber-producing forest burning each year in severe wildfires has increased significantly in the past decade. The western United States, Canada, Siberia, Brazil and Australia have been most affected.

Timber demand is expected to almost triple by 2050. Supplying demand is clearly going to be challenging. Our research highlights the need to urgently adopt new management strategies and emerging technologies to combat the increasing threat of wildfires.

What we found

Burned-out trees stand in the charred forest outside Greenville, Calif., in 2021. The Dixie Fire burned over a half-million acres and leveled the town of Greenville. File Photo by Terry Schmitt/UPI
Burned-out trees stand in the charred forest outside Greenville, Calif., in 2021. The Dixie Fire burned over a half-million acres and leveled the town of Greenville. File Photo by Terry Schmitt/UPI

We combined global maps of logging activity and severe wildfires to determine how much timber-producing forest was lost to wildfire this century. Between 2001 and 2021, up to 25 million hectares of timber-producing forest was severely burned. The extent of fire has jumped markedly in the past decade, from an average of less than 1 million hectares a year up to 2015 to triple that since then.

At a national scale, the three countries with the largest absolute wildfire-induced losses of timber-producing forest were Russia, the United States and Canada. When it comes to proportion of their forestry land lost, the nations with the highest percentages burnt were Portugal, followed by Australia.

In this long exposure photograph, smoke and flames can be seen burning on both sides of the Christmas Valley area during the Caldor fire near Meyers, Calif., on August 30, 2021. File Photo by Peter DaSilva/UPI
In this long exposure photograph, smoke and flames can be seen burning on both sides of the Christmas Valley area during the Caldor fire near Meyers, Calif., on August 30, 2021. File Photo by Peter DaSilva/UPI

Why are forests burning?

Climate change is a major driver of fire weather and fire behavior. The increased risk of high-severity wildfire is an entirely expected outcome of warmer temperatures and, in some places, reduced rainfall.

A CalFire helicopter heads to make a retardant drop on the Dixie fire above the Plumas National Forest in Plumas and Butte Counties in July 2021. Wildfires were raging in many western states. File Photo by Peter DaSilva/UPI
A CalFire helicopter heads to make a retardant drop on the Dixie fire above the Plumas National Forest in Plumas and Butte Counties in July 2021. Wildfires were raging in many western states. File Photo by Peter DaSilva/UPI

However, it remains unclear why so much wood-production forest is being lost, and why the increase in burnt area has been so marked in the past decade.

One possible reason is logging makes forests more flammable. This has been documented in parts of southeastern Australia, where intact forest always burnt at lower severity than harvested forest across the entire footprint of the Black Summer fires. Forests that have been subject to thinning also are at risk of high-severity wildfire.

A sawyer with the Billings IA, a Bureau of Land Management Initial Attack crew based in Billings, Mont., saws off tree limbs while prepping a road for burnout operations in 2020 in Mendocino National Forest. File Photo by Spc. Michael Ybarra/U.S. Army
A sawyer with the Billings IA, a Bureau of Land Management Initial Attack crew based in Billings, Mont., saws off tree limbs while prepping a road for burnout operations in 2020 in Mendocino National Forest. File Photo by Spc. Michael Ybarra/U.S. Army

What does this mean?

Whatever the reason, it is clear these fires in wood-production forests will have profound impacts on global timber supplies and all the industries associated with them. This is a huge problem for society and the environment, because timber demand is expected to triple by 2050, in part to facilitate the transition away from carbon-intensive cement in construction.

In many parts of the world, it typically takes 80 to 100 years or even longer to grow a tree to a size at which it can be a saw log for products like furniture and floorboards. So the increased frequency of high-severity wildfire means fewer areas of forest will escape fire for long enough to reach timber harvesting age.

This is especially problematic where logging makes forests more prone to burning in a high-severity wildfire.

Furthermore, given the long-term nature of timber production, typically on cutting cycles ranging from 40 years to more than a century, future timber crops will face a very different climate as they mature.

Responding to challenge

If wood production from forests becomes increasing costly and timber is increasingly hard to source, there may be more pressure from industry and government to log other places, such as tropical forests, with high biodiversity and conservation value.

One way to tackle the problem is to grow more timber in plantations. Plantations already produce a third of the main forms of wood-producing timber -- called industrial roundwood. They do this from just 3% of the area of natural forests.

Well-managed plantations can grow a successful timber crop within a couple of decades. This is a lot shorter than the many decades and sometimes even centuries required to grow sawlogs in native forests. Having a shorter growing time in plantations increases the chances of harvesting trees before they are destroyed in a wildfire.

But plantations, like some logged and regenerated native forests, can be highly flammable. Fire risks need to be carefully managed. That includes planning, to avoid putting neighboring areas and human communities at greater risk of being burnt.

Another key strategy to better protect timber resources will be to adopt new technologies to more quickly detect and then rapidly suppress ignitions such as those originating from lightning strikes.

Big fires start as small fires. The best time to suppress fires is when they are small, and as soon as ignition occurs. We have been involved in the development of drone fleets and unmanned aerial water and fire suppressant dispensing craft to more quickly detect and extinguish wildfires.

New technologies, as well as more, better planned and managed plantations will be crucial in not only protecting forests, but also safeguarding the flow of marketable timber and the industries dependent upon them.

The Conversation
The Conversation

David Lindenmayer is a professor in the Fenner School of Environment and Society at Australian National University; Chris Bousfield is a postdoctoral research associate and David Edwards is a professor at the University of Cambridge.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.