Fire-smart solutions for sustainable wildfire risk prevention: Bottom-up initiatives meet top-down policies under EU green deal
Davide Ascoli,Silvio Daniele Oggioni,Anna Barbati,Antonio Tomao,M. Colonico,Piermaria Corona,Francesco Giannino,Mauro Moreno,Gavriil Xanthopoulos,K. Kaoukis,Miltiadis Athanasiou,Conceição Colaço,Francisco Rego,Ana Catarina Sequeira,Vanda Acácio,M Serra,Eduard Plana +16 more
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TL;DR: In this paper , the authors compared local approaches through a bottom-up selection of 38 initiatives, which were analyzed systematically through a set of fire-smart criteria: sustainability, cost-benefit ratio, synergies and inter-sectoral cooperation, integration between strategic prevention planning and multiple land governance goals (e.g., rural development, biodiversity conservation, energy supply), innovation and knowledge transfer, and adaptive management).
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Abstract: Fuel management for wildfire risk prevention generally lacks economic sustainability. In marginal areas of southern Europe, this limits fuel treatment programs from reaching the critical mass of required treated area to modify landscape flammability, the fire regime and its impacts. This study investigates key fuel management initiatives for wildfire risk prevention in southern EU countries. We compared local approaches through a bottom-up selection of 38 initiatives, which we analyzed systematically through a set of fire-smart criteria: sustainability, cost-benefit ratio, synergies and inter-sectoral cooperation, integration between strategic prevention planning and multiple land governance goals (e.g., rural development, biodiversity conservation, energy supply), innovation and knowledge transfer, and adaptive management. We summarized lessons learned from the most innovative initiatives, by identifying solutions and functional approaches for building sustainable fuel management at the landscape scale, under fire-smart management principles. These make synergistic use of private, public and European resources to activate value chains that valorize the products, by-products and services generated by fuel management activities and their positive externalities on ecosystem services. The multiple mechanisms include fire-marketing, Payment for Ecosystem Services schemes, specific taxes, or environmental compensatory measures. These mechanisms catalyze the interest of multiple stakeholders (economic actors, private owners, land and fire management agencies) improving the cost-efficiency of landscape fuel management. We contend that the EU Green Deal offers the political backing and framework (mainstreaming of EU strategies and funding opportunities) to enable the replication of documented fire-smart models and functional approaches to wildfire risk prevention.
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Rural development funding and wildfire prevention: Evidences of spatial mismatches with fire activity
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TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated the link between the spatial allocation of RDP subsidies, relevant for wildfires prevention, and the spatial distribution of fire activity and found a low association between RDP expenditure for fire-related measures and subsequent reduction of wildfire activity.
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