Author:
Riebau Allen R.,Fox Douglas
Abstract
This paper was presented at the conference ‘Integrating spatial technologies and ecological principles for a new age in fire management’, Boise, Idaho, USA, June 1999
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will implement new
regulations for the management of atmospheric particulate matter 2.5 µm
and less in diameter (PM2.5), tropospheric ozone, and
regional haze in the next few years. These three air quality issues relate
directly to forest and agriculture burning. Fire generates
PM2.5 and ozone precursor gases that reduce visibility.
Hence, wild and agricultural land managers will be subject to these air
quality regulations much as industrial and mobile sources have been for the
past 25 years. In addition, these new regulations come at a time when private
as well as public land managers throughout the United States are developing
plans to increase their application of fire as a management tool. Prescribed
fire will remain viable as a tool for land managers with these new regulations
but only under a responsible smoke management paradigm. This paradigm will
include formal ‘state-approved’ Smoke Management Programs and will
require the use of new and ‘approved’ technologies that have been
subjected to public and stakeholder scrutiny as regulatory tools. These
programs will acknowledge that wildland fire is different from conventional
human-caused air pollution sources. They will recognize that the managed use
of fire is a superior option to wildfire from public safety and health
perspectives. But they will also require greater utilization of non-burning
alternatives in all circumstances, especially where fire is used for economic
rather than ecological reasons. Through better smoke management and greater
use of non-burning alternatives, steadily reduced smoke emissions will likely
result.
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32 articles.
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