Bill Frist, M.D. , insightful and necessary read for all. In British Columbia, Canada, we are now all too familiar with life changing forest fires. In 2023, the Okanagan and Shuswap regions of British Columbia experienced devastating wildfires that significantly impacted the area. These fires ravaged over 20,000 hectares of land, causing extensive damage to forests, properties, and infrastructure. The financial cost of combating the fires and dealing with the aftermath soared above $720 million in insured damages alone, placing a heavy burden on local resources and emergency services. The fires led to the evacuation of numerous communities, disruption of daily life, and a long recovery process for the affected areas, including complete loss of home or business. The environmental and economic repercussions of the 2023 wildfires will be felt for years to come. That was only one part of the whole. In 2023, more than 2.84 million hectares of forest and land burned. Local, national and federal discussions, whether publicly stated or not, recognized that prescribed burns are imperative to managing our land with the changing climate temperatures.
Today in Forbes, I share how prescribed burns can make a dramatic difference in suppressing and preventing wildfires. One only needs to look at the Sycan Marsh Preserve in central Oregon to understand the impact: https://lnkd.in/eissGAwJ The Nature Conservancy #prescribedburns #conservation #wildfire
Chair, The Nature Conservancy Global Board
6moThank you for sharing this, Tereza Roux. What happened in British Columbia was a tragedy - I am hopeful that the impact of prescribed burns helps prevent wildfires of that magnitude from happening again.