Fire frequency and vulnerability in California

Source

Authors

Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment

Published

2023

Description

This Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment study by researchers Chris Field and Miyuki Hino shows that while maps of wildfire hazard suggest that higher-income communities are more at risk, low-income communities across the state tend to experience fires more frequently, and the impacts of small, frequent fires add up over time. Lower-income communities also have fewer resources to prepare for and recover from fires so properly identifying the most-affected areas can help direct assistance to the places that need it most. To broaden the lens on understanding wildfire risk and to help guide risk management efforts, Stanford-affiliated researchers explored the implications of three metrics that capture different aspects of fire risk: hazard as defined by fire hazard severity zones (FHSZs), fire damage from the most severe historical fire, and fire experience or number of incidents. The researchers also evaluated the relationships between those metrics and community-level social and economic characteristics as well as property value appreciation over time.

Climate Impact Tags

Wildfire

Adaptation Planning Guide Phases

Phase 2: Assess Vulnerability

Resource Type Tags

Scientific study

Topics

Extent: California

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Last updated: April 27, 2024