Forecasting Hourly Wildfire Risk: Enhancing Fire Danger Assessment Using Numerical Weather Prediction

Author:

Rodell Christopher1ORCID,Howard Rosie1,Jain Piyush2,Moisseeva Nadya3,Chui Timothy1,Stull Roland1

Affiliation:

1. a The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

2. c Northern Forestry Centre, Canadian Forest Service, Natural Resources Canada, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

3. b University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, Honolulu, Hawaii, Hawaii

Abstract

Abstract Wildfire agencies use fire danger rating systems (FDRSs) to deploy resources and issue public safety measures. The most widely used FDRS is the Canadian fire weather index (FWI) system, which uses weather inputs to estimate the potential for wildfires to start and spread. Current FWI forecasts provide a daily numerical value, representing potential fire severity at an assumed midafternoon time for peak fire activity. This assumption, based on typical diurnal weather patterns, is not always valid. To address this, we developed an hourly FWI (HFWI) system using numerical weather prediction. We validate HFWI against the traditional daily FWI (DFWI) by comparing HFWI forecasts with observation-derived DFWI values from 917 surface fire weather stations in western North America. Results indicate strong correlations between forecasted HFWI and the observation-derived DFWI. A positive mean bias in the daily maximum values of HFWI compared to the traditional DFWI suggests that HFWI can better capture severe fire weather variations regardless of when they occur. We confirm this by comparing HFWI with hourly fire radiative power (FRP) satellite observations for nine wildfire case studies in Canada and the United States. We demonstrate HFWI’s ability to forecast shifts in fire danger timing, especially during intensified fire activity in the late evening and early morning hours, while allowing for multiple periods of increased fire danger per day—a contrast to the conventional DFWI. This research highlights the HFWI system’s value in improving fire danger assessments and predictions, hopefully enhancing wildfire management, especially during atypical fire behavior.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Natural Resources Canada

British Columbia Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy

Ministry of Economic Development and Trade, Government of Alberta

Government of Northwest Territories

British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority

Mitacs

NSERC Western Grid Resilience

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

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3. Beck, J. A., and O. B. Armitage, 2004: Diurnal fine fuel moisture characteristics at a Northern Latitude. Proc. 22nd Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conf. Fire in Temperate, Boreal, and Montane Ecosystems, Tallahassee, FL, Tall Timbers Research Station, 211–221, https://talltimbers.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/211-BeckandArmitage2004_op.pdf.

4. Sensitivity of fire weather index to different reanalysis products in the Iberian Peninsula;Bedia, J.,2012

5. Boulder County Office of Disaster Management, 2022: Marshall Fire damage assessment. Boulder County Office of Disaster Management, accessed 27 October 2023, https://www.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=9f3314c39ad64fac925101aae0bdd62c.

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