Science Inventory

US Environmental Protection Agency Wildfire Outreach and Research Initiatives

Citation:

Markwiese, J., Ron Waschmann, E Henry Lee, P. Beedlow, S. Cline, Jim Power, N. Schumaker, Mark G. Johnson, D. Olszyk, J. Compton, Joe Ebersole, AND S. Leibowitz. US Environmental Protection Agency Wildfire Outreach and Research Initiatives. Post-Fire Science and Monitoring Symposium, Corvallis, OR, February 07 - 08, 2023.

Impact/Purpose:

This talk will provide an overview of EPA fire outreach and research eforts from national to regional (west Coast) to local (Oregon) levels. The talk will provide resources to conference paticipants on steps to reduce smoke exposure and protect public health, research efforts to understand effects of prescrived fire and information on what is being done in Corvallis, the Willamette Valey and the Pacific Northwest to address the growing risk of wildfires ia hotter, drier climate. 

Description:

The US Environmental Protection Agency is leading a coordinated national effort to protect public health and the environment in the face of increasing likelihood of wildfire ignitions, number of large wildfires (> 100,000 acres), and acres burned. In the Smoke-Ready Toolbox, the Agency and partners have prepared guidance to reduce public health risk before a wildfire to educate people about the risks of smoke exposure actions they can take to protect their health. Useful tools like the Smoke Sense app – a crowdsourcing, citizen science research project developed by EPA researchers – is helping to understand the steps people are willing to take to reduce their exposure and develop health risk communication strategies that improve public health when there is wildfire smoke. Focusing on the West Coast and increasing pressure to manage wildfire through controlled burns, the Agency recently completed a comparative assessment of the impacts of prescribed fire versus wildfire and highlights from this comprehensive approach using a western case study will be discussed. Locally, the EPA Office of Research and Development (ORD) is actively engaged in understanding fire effects on health and the environment: we are studying how climate change affects forest heath, wildfire, and forest susceptibility to disturbance (this conference); how fire affects terrestrial and aquatic habitat (this conference); how post-fire products like biochar can be used to remediate contaminated soils; how fire impacts air quality in the Pacific Northwest; and how fires in the Willamette Valley are affecting surface-water quality.  The views expressed in this abstract are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views or policies of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.  The views expressed in this abstract are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views or policies of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.  

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ SLIDE)
Product Published Date:02/08/2023
Record Last Revised:02/16/2023
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 357079