Écouter le feu. The aftermath of wildfires and the question of rebuilding in high risk fire areas

Journal title TERRITORIO
Author/s Peter Bosselman, Catherine Rannou, Marc Dilet
Publishing Year 2024 Issue 2023/105
Language English Pages 8 P. 7-14 File size 0 KB
DOI 10.3280/TR2023-105001OA
DOI is like a bar code for intellectual property: to have more infomation click here

FrancoAngeli is member of Publishers International Linking Association, Inc (PILA), a not-for-profit association which run the CrossRef service enabling links to and from online scholarly content.

Mega-fires have become frequent in areas around the world. They are no longer limited to areas in the Mediterranean climate. Extreme fires are now burning in Canada and Siberia due to more frequent fire weather conditions. Such conditions are strongly linked to the warming of the earth’s atmosphere. In the US the term mega-fires came into use after the 1988 fire at Yellowstone Park. Such fires can permanently transform a landscape into a non-forested habitat. Wildfires are uncontrolled fires that burn in the wildland urban interface. No longer are wildfires a topic of interest only to foresters. Those in the practice of urban design and planning need to take notice. Land-use changes made by local governments have permitted urban development within forested areas and they have further exacerbated fire risks.

Keywords: wildfires; climate change adaptation; urban development

Peter Bosselman, Catherine Rannou, Marc Dilet, Écouter le feu. The aftermath of wildfires and the question of rebuilding in high risk fire areas in "TERRITORIO" 105/2023, pp 7-14, DOI: 10.3280/TR2023-105001OA