Current:Home > InvestMaui wildfire report details how communities can reduce the risk of similar disasters -ThriveEdge Finance
Maui wildfire report details how communities can reduce the risk of similar disasters
View
Date:2025-04-15 14:37:00
A new report on the deadliest U.S. wildfire in a century details steps communities can take to reduce the likelihood that grassland wildfires will turn into urban conflagrations.
The report, from a nonprofit scientific research group backed by insurance companies, examined the ways an Aug. 8, 2023, wildfire destroyed the historic Maui town of Lahaina, killing 102 people.
According to an executive summary released Wednesday by the Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety, researchers found that a multifaceted approach to fire protection — including establishing fuel breaks around a town, using fire-resistant building materials and reducing flammable connections between homes such as wooden fences — can give firefighters valuable time to fight fires and even help stop the spread of flames through a community.
“It’s a layered issue. Everyone should work together,” said IBHS lead researcher and report author Faraz Hedayati, including government leaders, community groups and individual property owners.
“We can start by hardening homes on the edge of the community, so a fast-moving grass fire never gets the opportunity to become embers” that can ignite other fires, as happened in Lahaina, he said.
Grass fires grow quickly but typically only send embers a few feet in the air and a short distance along the ground, Hedayati said. Burning buildings, however, create large embers with a lot of buoyancy that can travel long distances, he said.
It was building embers, combined with high winds that were buffeting Maui the day of the fire, that allowed the flames in Lahaina to spread in all directions, according to the report. The embers started new spot fires throughout the town. The winds lengthened the flames — allowing them to reach farther than they normally would have — and bent them toward the ground, where they could ignite vehicles, landscaping and other flammable material.
The size of flames often exceeded the distance between structures, directly igniting homes and buildings downwind, according to the report. The fire grew so hot that the temperature likely surpassed the tolerance of even fire-resistant building materials.
Still, some homes were left mostly or partly unburned in the midst of the devastation. The researchers used those homes as case studies, examining factors that helped to protect the structures.
One home that survived the fire was surrounded by about 35 feet (11 meters) of short, well-maintained grass and a paved driveway, essentially eliminating any combustible pathway for the flames.
A home nearby was protected in part by a fence. Part of the fence was flammable, and was damaged by the fire, but most of it was made of stone — including the section of the fence that was attached to the house. The stone fence helped to break the fire’s path, the report found, preventing the home from catching fire.
Other homes surrounded by defensible spaces and noncombustible fences were not spared, however. In some cases, flying embers from nearby burning homes landed on roofs or siding. In other cases, the fire was burning hot enough that radiant heat from the flames caused nearby building materials to ignite.
“Structure separation — that’s the driving factor on many aspects of the risk,” said Hedayati.
The takeaway? Hardening homes on the edge of a community can help prevent wildland fires from becoming urban fires, and hardening the homes inside a community can help slow or limit the spread of a fire that has already penetrated the wildland-urban interface.
In other words, it’s all about connections and pathways, according to the report: Does the wildland area surrounding a community connect directly to homes because there isn’t a big enough break in vegetation? Are there flammable pathways like wooden fences, sheds or vehicles that allow flames to easily jump from building to building? If the flames do reach a home, is it built out of fire-resistant materials, or out of easily combustible fuels?
For homeowners, making these changes individually can be expensive. But in some cases neighbors can work together, Hedayati said, perhaps splitting the cost to install a stone fence along a shared property line.
“The survival of one or two homes can lead to breaking the chain of conflagration in a community. That is something that is important to reduce exposure,” Hedayati said.
veryGood! (6138)
Related
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Kenny Anderson: The Market Whisperer's Expertise in Macroeconomic Analysis and Labor Market
- Trademark tiff over 'Taco Tuesday' ends. Taco Bell is giving away free tacos to celebrate.
- Member of ‘Tennessee Three’ makes move toward 2024 Senate bid
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Even Zoom wants its workers back in the office: 'A hybrid approach'
- More than 40,000 Americans are genetically related to 27 enslaved people excavated from Maryland
- 65-year-old woman hospitalized after apparent shark bite at New York City's Rockaway Beach
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Zendaya's Hairstylist Kim Kimble Wants You to Follow These Easy AF Beauty Rules
Ranking
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Mississippi GOP Gov. Tate Reeves will face Democrat Brandon Presley in the November election
- Missouri grandfather charged in 7-year-old’s accidental shooting death
- Teen sisters have been missing from Michigan since June. The FBI is joining the search.
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Video shows bull escape rodeo, charge into parking lot as workers scramble to corral it
- In Utah and Kansas, state courts flex power over new laws regulating abortion post-Roe
- Tampa Bay Rays ace Shane McClanahan likely out for rest of season: 'Surgery is an option'
Recommendation
'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
Tory Lanez sentenced to 10 years for shooting Megan Thee Stallion in the feet in 2020
Musk said he'll pay legal costs for employees treated unfairly over Twitter
Pence is heading to the debate stage, SCOTUS backs Biden on 'ghost guns': 5 Things podcast
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Cameron Diaz, Tiffany Haddish and Zoe Saldana Have a Girls' Night Out at Taylor Swift's Eras Tour
When do new 'Only Murders in the Building' episodes come out? Season 3 cast, schedule, how to watch
American nurse and her young daughter freed, nearly two weeks after abduction in Haiti