Firestorm
How Wildfire Will Shape Our Future
272 pages
6 x 9
26 photos
"Frightening...Firestorm comes alive when Struzik discusses the work of offbeat scientists." —New York Times Book Review
"Comprehensive and compelling." —Booklist
"A powerful message." —Kirkus
"Should be required reading." —Library Journal
For two months in the spring of 2016, the world watched as wildfire ravaged the Canadian town of Fort McMurray. Firefighters named the fire “the Beast.” It acted like a mythical animal, alive with destructive energy, and they hoped never to see anything like it again. Yet it’s not a stretch to imagine we will all soon live in a world in which fires like the Beast are commonplace. A glance at international headlines shows a remarkable increase in higher temperatures, stronger winds, and drier lands– a trifecta for igniting wildfires like we’ve rarely seen before.
This change is particularly noticeable in the northern forests of the United States and Canada. These forests require fire to maintain healthy ecosystems, but as the human population grows, and as changes in climate, animal and insect species, and disease cause further destabilization, wildfires have turned into a potentially uncontrollable threat to human lives and livelihoods.
Our understanding of the role fire plays in healthy forests has come a long way in the past century. Despite this, we are not prepared to deal with an escalation of fire during periods of intense drought and shorter winters, earlier springs, potentially more lightning strikes and hotter summers. There is too much fuel on the ground, too many people and assets to protect, and no plan in place to deal with these challenges.
In Firestorm, journalist Edward Struzik visits scorched earth from Alaska to Maine, and introduces the scientists, firefighters, and resource managers making the case for a radically different approach to managing wildfire in the 21st century. Wildfires can no longer be treated as avoidable events because the risk and dangers are becoming too great and costly. Struzik weaves a heart-pumping narrative of science, economics, politics, and human determination and points to the ways that we, and the wilder inhabitants of the forests around our cities and towns, might yet flourish in an age of growing megafires.
"Frightening...Firestorm comes alive when Struzik discusses the work of offbeat scientists."
New York Times Book Review
"As greater and more destructive fires become the norm, this narrative should be required reading."
Library Journal
"Combining personal insights with keen investigative-journalistic skills, Struzik presents a comprehensive and compelling overview of the future of wildfire management."
Booklist
"Struzik delivers a powerful message that will appeal to environmentally minded readers and students of climate change."
Kirkus
"Struzik's compelling narrative combines personal stories, photographs, history, and interviews with scientists, government officials, and the public. What emerges is a portrait of the intricacies of the forest management practices, settlement patterns, economic motivators, and political pressures that lead up to and influence decisions during these wildfires...Struzik warns readers of the bleak reality that may lie ahead if we continue 'business as usual,'…[but] does not forfeit hope...The decisions and policies we make now, as a nation and as a global community, will have a profound influence on what our world looks like in the future."
Science
"A new wildlife paradigm is emerging in North America's boreal forests...Edward Struzik's deft account interweaves reportage, science and policy to show how fires that are normally key to ecological resilience are growing bigger and faster, thawing permafrost, degrading watersheds and disrupting habitats of species from grizzly bears to fungi."
Nature
"Struzik...cover[s] over a century of scorched earth where science, business, and politics have collided over and over again to produce ever-shifting policies of containment and prevention. Not just a remarkable history, the book also speculates about future where humans might not eradicate megafires, but thrive nonetheless."
Omnivoracious: The Amazon Book Review
"Searing."
High Country News
"Firestorm reads at times like an exhilarating novel but it is neither flippant nor alarmist...The book is a clear-eyed vision, expertly and compellingly told, of what's ahead as the climate warms...a fascinating page-turner."
Edmonton Journal
"An essential and crackling good read on the new reality of megafires...a new kind of prophetic non-fiction...Firestorm belongs in both depth and timeliness next to Elizabeth Kolbert's fascinating and grim account of the forces eroding biological diversity in The Sixth Extinction."
Tyee
"Firestorm paints a comprehensive picture of the changes taking place in the boreal forest and how wildfires are reshaping Alberta...Struzik masterfully weaves together interviews with dozens of wildfire researchers and management experts."
Alberta Views
"Throughout Firestorm Struzik treats his readers to the exceptional analysis and exposition distinguishing him as one of our best science/environment/nature writers... It’s a must-read for anyone wanting to learn about our past relationship with wildfire, for anyone looking for suggestions about what needs to be done to retain some influence over how wildfire will figure in our future."
Wildlands Advocate
"Impressively and comprehensively informative, exceptionally well written, organized and presented, Firestorm: How Wildfire Will Shape Our Future is one of those extraordinary studies that will be read with interest by environmental experts and non-specialist general readers alike. Certain to be an enduringly valued and highly prized addition."
Midwest Book Review
"A fascinating and much-need account of a new, fiercer era of forest fire. Struzik is a sure guide as we set out on an uncertain path through the smoky woods and beyond."
David George Haskell, author of The Songs of Trees and The Forest Unseen. Professor, University of the South
"Powerful and thought-provoking, Firestorm expertly frames emerging wildfire trends and future challenges. Offering a timely, insightful view of our changing wildfire paradigm, this book is a must-read for students of fire as well as anyone interested in understanding, preparing for, and acting on the ways wildfire will impact our communities."
Dr. Thomas Zimmerman, President, International Association of Wildland Fire
"A crackling good read on why and how megafires are burning bigger, hotter, faster and wilder through North America's forests. Science reporting so close to the ground that you can feel the heat."
Andrew Nikiforuk, journalist and author of Slick Water and Energy of Slaves
Dedication
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Beast Awakens
Chapter 2: Inside the Mind of a Wildfire
Chapter 3: A Legacy of Fire Suppression
Chapter 4: Visions of the Pyrocene
Chapter 5: Water on Fire
Chapter 6: The Big Smoke
Chapter 7; Drought, Disease, Insects, Wildfire
Chapter 8: Fire on Ice
Chapter 9: Agent of Change
Chapter 10: Resilience and Recovery
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Index
Plan to attend the upcoming book reading and panel discussion that will discuss a clear-eyed look at the challenges we face in an age of megafires.
On Oct 24 at 5 p.m., journalist and explorer Ed Struzik will lead a public panel discussion on the topics that are highlighted in his new book, Firestorm: How Wildfire Will Shape Our Future. The author will also provide a reading from his book.
The book profiles the research of many University of Alberta scientists, research associates and graduate students such as Mike Flannigan, Uldis Silins, Scott Nielsen, Marc Andre Parisien, Ellen Whitman, Elly Knight and more.
Dr. Thomas Zimmerman, President, International Association of Wildland Fire, describes the book as “powerful and thought-provoking.” Rachel Carson Medal winner Andrew Nikiforuk sees it as a “crackling good read." Biologist David George Haskell, a Pulitzer Prize finalist, calls it a “fascinating and much needed account of a new, fiercer era of forest fire. Struzik is a sure guide as we set out on an uncertain path through the smoky woods and beyond.”
The event is in the Ag-For Atrium on North Campus of the University of Alberta. This is a public, free event.
Join us on Friday, January 19, 2018, for a presentation by Ed Struzik, the author of Firestorm, alongside Jamie Coutts, Regional Fire Chief for Lesser Slave Regional Fire Service; and Mike Flannigan, Professor of Wildland Fire at University of Alberta.
Of those 12 fires, three of them burned in Alberta, but surprisingly the Fort McMurray wildfire of 2016, dubbed "The Beast" is not on that list. Hear Struzik explain how he came to the conclusion to leave the Fort McMurray wildfire off his list, and find out what Jamie Coutts, Fire Chief for Slave Lake, Alberta -- who fought the wildfires in both Fort McMurray and Slave Lake -- thinks of this conclusion. Does Coutts agree or disagree with Struzik's assessment? We'll also hear from Dr. Mike Flannigan, Professor of Wildland Fire at the University of Alberta, and get his thoughts on the matter.
Following the presentation, guests will enjoy a reception, with the opportunity to meet Struzik, Coutts and Dr. Flannigan. Ed Struzik will also be available for a book signing.
Light refreshments will be provided and a cash bar will be available.
$15* (1 x Free Popcorn & 1 x Pop or Bottled Water included)
Canadian author Edward Struzik shares his new book Firestorm. The book chronicles several mega fires including the 2016 Fort McMurray fire and reports on the lasting effects and implications fire has on the future. This event is at the Pincher Creek Town Office Gymnasium.
Ed Struzik will discuss and present photographs of 12 incredible wildfires that have burned in North America, and had the biggest impact on society and fire management, over the turn of the last century. The talk is part of the Museum's Diamond Anniversary Lecture Series. It is from 1-2:30pm and costs $7 per person.
Firestorm: How Wildfire Will Shape Our Future
Thursday, April 5, 7 PM
Edward Struzik will speak to his latest book, Firestorm, that warns of larger and more frequent fires that will be increasingly difficult to manage. Edward Struzik is a writer, photographer, public speaker. He believes that the worst is yet to come for both forest towns and ecosystems if we fail to adapt to the new wildfire paradigm that is unfolding. Introduction by Cliff White.
Ed Struzik at the Luskin Center for Innovation
Thursday, April 19, 2018 - 5:00pm - 7:00pm
UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, Room 2355
337 Charles E. Young Drive East
Los Angeles, CA 90095
Join the UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation in welcoming Edward Struzik to discuss his book Firestorm. The evening event will include a reception, presentation, panel discussion, author Q&A, and book signing.
Featured speaker: Edward Struzik
Panelists: Douglas Bevington, Environment Now (moderator); Beth Burnham, North Topanga Canyon Fire Safe Council; Chad Hanson, The John Muir Project (invited); Alex Hall, UCLA; Chief Ralph Terrazas, City of Los Angeles
Fire plays an important role in maintaining healthy forests, but wildfires are changing. Glance at headlines from all over the globe and you’ll see wildfires are growing more intense and destructive, endangering human lives and entire ecosystems.
Join Island Press for a free webinar discussing the past, present, and future of wildfires in North America. Science journalist Edward Struzik will provide insights into the landscape changes that he witnessed while writing his book, Firestorm: How Wildfire Will Shape Our Future. Fire ecologists Andrew Barton and Helen Poulos will delve into the differences between geographical areas and types of forests across North America.
The panelists will discuss how wildfire and climate are shaping our forests and the implications of changes on fire management practices.
Panelists:
Moderator: Jennifer Marlon, research scientist at Yale's School of Forestry and Environmental Studies and the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication
A Changing Climate Means A Changing Society. The Island Press Urban Resilience Project, Supported By The Kresge Foundation And The JPB Foundation, Is Committed To A Greener, Fairer Future. This Op-Ed Was Originally Published September 12, 2017 in The Progressive.
If you live in the northwestern half of the continent, as I do, there has been no escaping this year’s extraordinary wildfire season.
Tens of thousands of people have been forced to evacuate their homes. Tourists and hikers destined for national parks such as Glacier, Waterton, Yosemite and Mount Rainier have had to cancel plans or suffer through noxious smoke drifting in from fires, some hundreds of miles away. Hardly a day goes by when a public health official isn’t warning people to stay inside or reduce physical activity.
Once the smoke clears, a more enduring problem will emerge. Forests play a large role in regulating climate change and rainfall patterns over land. They also act as filters for water consumed by hundreds of millions of people.
But once trees catch fire, they unleash ash, sediments and various noxious chemicals. And heat from fires undermines soil stability. Then, when heavy rain falls, tainted water slides into rivers rather than seeping into underground aquifers. If it rains hard enough, flooding often follows, especially when there are no trees to take up what moisture is absorbed into the soil.
The inevitable overload of carbon and sediment coming from a big fire can interfere with a water treatment plant’s disinfection process, just like a dishwasher with a plugged drain. When that happens, carbon reacts with chlorine and produces undesirable chemical byproducts, including known and suspected carcinogens.
The science of wildfire hydrology has been around for some time. But most government agencies wouldn’t consider funding research into this field until the 2002 Hayman fire burned nearly 138,000 acres of forest in the Colorado Rockies, producing catastrophic results.
Without trees, vegetation and a stable soil structure to absorb the heavy rains that followed, Colorado rivers and streams degraded by ash, debris, heavy metals and other contaminants flooded through a watershed that serves 75 percent of the state’s residents. Fifteen years after the fire, the blue-ribbon South Platte River trout fishery has still not fully recovered.
A similar thing is happening in Fort McMurray, in Alberta, Canada, where a 2016 fire forced the evacuation of 90,000 people. This year, that city is likely to spend two to three times more on chemicals to keep its drinking water safe. Portland, Oregon, now at the center of fires burning in that traditionally soggy state, is being monitored for water contamination, as are a number of other cities.
There are no easy solutions. Fires are burning bigger, hotter, faster and more often in forest landscapes occupied by humans. Humans are responsible for igniting most wildfires. Climate change increases the risk because heat dries out forests and increases the likelihood of lightning.
Ramping up water treatment systems is one (expensive) option. Enhanced protection of our forested watersheds is a better solution. Healthy forests are an inexpensive way of keeping our water clean and filtered. In a world of bigger, hotter fires, it is time to think of forests as vital infrastructure, and to invest in preserving these resources for the future.
Edward Struzik's Firestorm is a "comprehensive and compelling" (Booklist) look at wildfires in the age of climate change. We sat down with Struik to talk about wildfire, first responders, and how megafires will shape our future. Have more questions for Struzik? Share them in the comments below.
Your last book, Future Arctic looked at how politics and climate change are altering the polar world. Why write a book about wildfires next? Is there any connection between the two topics?
The relationship between climate change and wildfire is very much like the relationship between climate change and the Arctic. Heat melts sea ice and glaciers just as fast, or faster, than it dries up a forest. That’s important to understand because the last decade has been the warmest on record. In addition to drying forests, hotter weather produces more lightning, which is responsible for most of the biggest wildfires that occur in North America. As a result of decades of aggressive firefighting efforts, there are also more mature trees covering the forest landscape. Tens of millions of these trees are dead or dying thanks to drought, and insects and disease that are the beneficiaries of the warming that is taking place. It all adds up to fires burning bigger, hotter, faster and more often. Coincidentally, black ash from these fires is falling on, and darkening glaciers and sea ice. Instead of reflecting heat from the sun, the dark ice is absorbing it, making them more susceptible to the warming that is taking place.
How do wildfires impact people who don’t live near forests? Why should they care about the increase in wildfire frequency and severity?
The best way to explain this is to describe what happened in the summer of 1950 when a massive wildfire in a remote area of northwestern Canada sent a plume of smoke to eastern Canada, the United States, and eventually to parts of Europe. It was not an alien invasion, a volcanic eruption, or an eclipse of the sun as many people suspected. But in places such as Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Fort Erie and many towns in New York state, it was so dark at midday that the lights at baseball fields had to be turned on to illuminate play on the field. The pall that the fire’s smoke cast over eastern North America generated so much public concern that the New York Times put the story on the front page. Without the internet and access to daily media reports, many New Yorkers didn’t know what to make of this event. One elderly man in the town of Busti, New York was so frazzled when a relative went in to check on him, he was shaking like a leaf. "Do you think this is the end of the world?" he asked.
This isn’t an isolated example. It’s taken decades for public health officials to fully appreciate that smoke from wildfires is as noxious as cigarette smoke, and that this smoke can travel long distances. A recent Yale University-led study predicts that by mid-century, 82 million people in the United States alone will be seriously affected by noxious smoke waves lasting more than a day. In 2002, smoke from wildfires in the province of Quebec resulted in a spike in the number of people in the northeastern part of the United States who had to be hospitalized because of respiratory problems. In 2004, smoke from fires in Alaska and western Canada resulted in ozone concentrations in Houston rising by 50 to 100 percent from already dangerous pre-existing levels. In 2012, people in the city of Salmon, Idaho were breathing in particulate matter from smoke that was eight times higher than what is considered safe. The Halmstead fire that caused this was more than 100 miles away.
You took many of the photos in Firestorm. How can photographs impact our understanding of how wildfires change landscapes over time?
It’s difficult to explain in words how much energy there is in a wildfire. Only a picture does it justice. Who can forget the images of hundreds of homes in Fort McMurray being burned to the ground, or of a helicopter carrying a water bucket looking like a speck against the backdrop of a giant plume of smoke? It’s hard to imagine a large tundra hill collapsing in a mud slide when heat from a wildfire melts the permafrost that holds it together, but photos give us some semblance of understanding. Photos are also an effective way of showing how quickly forests can recover from fire. While travelling through a part of Alaska that had recently burned, I ventured into a charred area and took photos of plants rising from a forest floor that was still smoldering in places. It was mesmerizing.
In the book, you relate fire to three other fundamental natural elements: water, earth, air. Can you explain briefly how wildfires impact each of these in unexpected ways?
As I pointed out, smoke from wildfire can seriously affect air quality in cities located hundreds and sometimes thousands of miles away. The relationship between wildfire and watersheds is much more complex, with each affecting the other in ways we need to study more carefully. When the Hayman Fire removed thousands of trees from parts of Colorado’s mountain landscape in 2002, the soils in those denuded landscapes baked in the dry, hot drought conditions that followed. Some spring-fed streams stopped flowing. Chemical compounds that were vaporized by the fire got driven into the soil. As they condensed, they formed an impervious layer just below the surface. Hydrophobic is the word that geologists use to describe such soils.
Without trees, vegetation, and a stable soil structure to absorb the heavy rains that eventually followed in the denuded Rocky Mountain landscape, tons of ash, debris, heavy metals, and nutrients were flushed through the watershed that provides drinking water to 75 percent of the state’s residents. Hundreds of tons of sediment filled lakes and reservoirs. Intakes got clogged. Water quality suffered, not just for a few days, but for several years. The after-effects of the fire also led to the precipitous decline of the blue-ribbon South Platte River trout fishery, which was the best of any river in the United States within a one-hour drive of a city.
To find a solution, more than sixty scientists from various disciplines were brought in. Crews dredged out tens of thousands of tons of sediment. More than 175,000 trees were planted. Still, the drinking water quality problems persisted. Literally hundreds of communities are vulnerable to water and soil problems like these.
Firestorm focuses on wildfires from the United States and Canada. What lessons can be drawn from your book that extend beyond North America?
Wildfire is now a dominant force no matter where you live. Intense fires like we’ve seen in Fort McMurray and other parts of North America are burning in places all over the world. Chile, South Africa, New Zealand, and Portugal all had unprecedented fire events this year. Across the globe, these fires are going to get worse before they get better because of climate change and because more people are living, working and recreating in forest environments. Air and water quality will suffer. Homes and business will burn. People will die.
Other places can apply the lessons we’ve learned in North America: that wildfire and forest management has to evolve in scope and complexity, and it has to be shaped by public health officials, urban and rural planners, risk managers, forest hydrologists, as well as wildfire scientist and wildfire fighters. That being said, North Americans have a lot to learn from experts in places such as Australia, where reducing the risk of wildfire is, in some ways, years ahead. What we see happening now in our forests started happening well over a decade ago in their bushlands.
Media coverage often focuses on the economic costs of wildfires. Can you talk about the emotional impact of wildfires, for first responders and people whose communities are impacted?
In the aftermath of the Fort McMurray fire, many of the 88,000 people who were forced to flee chose not to return for psychological as well as economic reasons. Among those who did come back, more than 20,000 have sought some form of counselling. Some firefighters did as well. Darby Allen, the man who led the efforts to contain the fires in Fort McMurray had already planned on retiring but admitted that the emotional toll from that fire may have hastened his decision to call it quits. A few weeks after retiring, he admitted he said he was still plagued by guilt, not being able to save more homes. A church minister I profiled in the book told me that his parish saw a huge spike in the number of people attending services after the fire. Many of them had never given any serious thought of joining before the city burned. In his words, they were lost souls, looking for reassurance.
From your research, what will be the key to managing wildfires in the age of climate change?
Tom Zimmerman, the president of the International Association of Wildland Fire, said it best: “Business as usual is not going to be successful.” The rising cost of fighting fires in this age of climate change is increasingly taking money away from forest conservation programs. We need to invest much more in wildfire science, climate change adaptation, and in making forest communities more resilient to fire.
What in the course of researching and writing about megafires surprised or alarmed you the most?
Two things that stand out are how fast fire can move and how it can create its own weather. The Vega fire that burned in Alberta in 1968 set a record when it made a 40-mile run in just ten hours, while the Fort McMurray fire of 2016 unnerved scientists when a pyrocumulonimbus cloud that formed from the hot air triggered a lightning storm. That electrical storm ignited a cluster of new fires more than 20 miles away. No one in the world of wildfire science had ever seen anything like it.
Another thing that surprised me was how these intense fires can transform forest landscapes in very dramatic ways, especially when they recur before coniferous trees get a chance to mature. I personally saw, or was shown photos of fires that had burned so hot that almost nothing grew back. Vibrant spruce forests were turned into deserts. On the positive side, I learned wildfires can enhance habitat for grizzly bears, moose, elk, deer and many other animals because they give rise to a new crop of berries, roots, grasses, and aspen shoots that these animals feed on.
What do you hope readers take away from this book?
Wildfire touches on nearly everything important to humans, on both a personal and a national level. Fire is an integral part of many ecosystems. We love the scenic beauty of towns like Whitefish, Montana, and Banff, Alberta. We need clean air to breathe and clean water to drink, both of which can be impacted by a vast wildfire. Without a new, evolving plan and the resources that are needed to deal with the new paradigm unfolding in the northern forests, year-round and runaway fire seasons will overtake our ability to manage forests in a way that serves our best interests.
From “California Wildfires Rip Through Parched Land,” to “Wildfires Force Thousands to Evacuate in Southern France,” to “Devastating Wildfire Can Be Seen from Space,” news headlines around the world reveal a new reality of devastating megafires. This summer, California’s Detwiler Fire burned over 80,000 acres and crept uncomfortably close to Yosemite National Park. In Canada, military aircrafts were called in to battle flames that ravaged British Columbia and forced the evacuation of nearly 40,000 people. Megafires like these loom as costly and potentially deadly threats—and insist on a radical new way of thinking about forests, wildfires, and our relationship to the natural world.
In Firestorm: How Wildfire Will Shape Our Future, journalist and explorer Edward Struzik offers a page-turning examination of wildfires in the age of climate change. With verity and heart, it points to the ways that we, and the wilder inhabitants of our forests, might yet flourish in an age of megafires.
Check out an excerpt from the book below, and pick up the e-book for just $7.99 this month only.
As flames continue to engulf Southern California, it's clear we need a radically different approach to managing wildfires in this age of growing megafires. No longer can wildfires be treated as avoidable events because the risks and dangers are becoming too great and costly. As Firestorm author Ed Struzik details in our latest Infinite Earth Radio podcast episode, we must learn how to make ourselves more resilient to wildfires. How exactly? Give it a listen below to find out.
The Infinite Earth Radio podcast is a weekly podcast produced by Skeo in association with the Local Government Commission.
Check out our entire series of podcasts on urban resilience topics HERE.
Today’s headlines reveal a new reality of devastating megafires in places like Greenland, Central Africa, and California. Massive wildfires loom as costly, deadly threats—and demand radical new approaches to forests, wildfires, and our relationship with the natural world.
Now, award-wrinning journalist and explorer Edward Struzik delivers an update of his 2017 title Firestorm. Struzik confronts the new reality of wildfire, offering a deftly woven tale of science, economics, politics, and human determination. He visits scorched earth from Alaska to Maine, and introduces the scientists, firefighters, and resource managers making the case for a different approach to managing wildfire in the 21st century.
The photos below offer a glimpse into some of the stories that Struzik shares in Firestorm.