Forest fires: from research to stakeholder needs

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Forest fires: from research to stakeholder needs C. Giannakopoulos, M. Hatzaki, A. Karali, A. Roussos, E. Athanasopoulou WP6 Climate services for the forest fire sector National Observatory of Athens Greece

description

WP6 Climate services for the forest fire sector. Forest fires: from research to stakeholder needs. C. Giannakopoulos, M. Hatzaki , A. Karali , A. Roussos, E. Athanasopoulou. National Observatory of Athens Greece. Data used in the study. Study Area: Greece. Study Period: 19 83 - 1997. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Forest fires: from research to stakeholder needs

Page 1: Forest  fires: from research to stakeholder needs

Forest fires: from research to stakeholder needs

C. Giannakopoulos, M. Hatzaki, A. Karali, A. Roussos,E. Athanasopoulou

WP6 Climate services for the forest fire sector

National Observatory of AthensGreece

Page 2: Forest  fires: from research to stakeholder needs

Data used in the study

Data

Study Area: Greece

Study Period: 1983 - 1997

Forest Fire Data

Forest Special Secretariat of the Ministry of Environment, Energy & Climate Change

Mean Daily Values of

Meteorological Parameters

Hellenic National Meteorological

Service

Page 3: Forest  fires: from research to stakeholder needs

Canadian Forest Fire Index (FWI)• daily meteorological-based index used worldwide to estimate fire danger in a generalized fuel type• 6 standard components each measuring a different aspect of fire danger:

Fuel moisture codes following daily changes in the moisture contents of three classes of forest fuel with different drying rates

Fire behaviour indices representing the rate of spread, fuel weight consumed and fire intensity

• FWI components depend on daily noon measurements of dry-bulb temperature, air relative humidity, 10m wind speed and 24 h accumulated precipitation • The index is divided into categories, defined by sensitivity studies tailored to the region of interest

Page 4: Forest  fires: from research to stakeholder needs

FWI threshold estimationa. Ioannina

R2 = 0.8825

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b. Elliniko

R2 = 0.8655

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• The index was classified in categories of bin with size 1 and the average value of the number of fires that occurred at each category was calculated for each station

• The best estimated polynomial fit was applied on the data

• A pattern seems to emerge from the results analysis which classifies the domain into two distinct areas of different fire behaviour

• In Eastern Continental Greece (ECG) one fire per day (extreme fire risk) occurs when FWI=30

• In Western Continental Greece (WCG) one fire per day occurs when FWI=15

Page 5: Forest  fires: from research to stakeholder needs

FWI threshold estimationc. Herakleio

R2 = 0.882

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No

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The distinct behaviour can be attributed to the different meteorological regimes prevalent in each of the three regions:

• WCG is characterized by high precipitation amounts (resulting in higher fuel moisture content)

• in ECG and Crete, precipitation amounts are substantially lower and dry northern winds mostly prevail during the warm period of the year

• In Crete one fire per day occurs when FWI=40

Page 6: Forest  fires: from research to stakeholder needs

FWI threshold estimation Thresholds

• West Greece FWI>15

• East Greece FWI>30

• Crete FWI>40

Page 7: Forest  fires: from research to stakeholder needs

FWI Sensitivity Test

• The distribution is shifted to lower wind speed values and FWI takes substantially lower values for Ioannina (in WCG) compared to Elliniko (Athens, in ECG). In Herakleio (Crete) the wind speed receives even higher values contributing to the high index values

• Forest ecosystems to the south are more adapted and less sensitive to fire risk than the forest ecosystems further northDays with r<1mm and rh<60%

FWI<15 15≤FWI<30 30≤FWI<45

FWI≥45

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Daily versus noon meteorological values - I

Underestimation 40%

Page 9: Forest  fires: from research to stakeholder needs

Daily versus noon meteorological values - II

Underestimation 50% during

summer period

Page 10: Forest  fires: from research to stakeholder needs

Future Projections

• Present and future model output from an RCM ensemble mean, developed within EU ENSEMBLES project, at 25km horizontal resolution

• The control run represents the base period 1961-1990 and is used as reference for comparison with future projections for the periods 2021-2050 and 2071-2100 based on the IPCC SRES A1B scenario

Page 11: Forest  fires: from research to stakeholder needs

Elevated Fire Risk Projections – ENSEMBLE mean

• In the near future (2021-2050) an increase of one month per year is expected in the southern part of the Iberian Peninsula and Northwestern Africa. In Eastern continental Greece, Italy and Sicilia an increase of up to 20 more days with elevated fire risk is estimated.

• In the distant future, the period of elevated fire risk increases by 60 more days per year for the Iberian Peninsula, and Northwestern Africa. Increases of 30 days or more will be evident in Greece, Italy and Sicilia. An increase of up to 40 more days per year with elevated fire risk is expected for the south of France.

Page 12: Forest  fires: from research to stakeholder needs

Evaluation with observations

• The calculation of the index was performed only for the fire season, which covers the months from May to October. As far as the reference period is concerned, the models slightly underestimate the index during May and June and overestimate it during the other months. The models are consistent and indicate the highest FWI values during July and August, when indeed most fire events occur.

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Statistical downscaling portal evaluation

• monthly total precipitation downscaled values and the original ERA-interim data are in good agreement especially from April to October

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Statistical downscaling portal evaluation

• wind speed poorly represented

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Statistical downscaling portal evaluation

• The index was directly downscaled (FWI_D) and was also calculated by using downscaled meteorological data (FWI_M). These results were compared to the FWI index values calculated from the ERA-Interim data set (FWI-Interim). FWI_D and FWI_M are consistent to the ERA-Interim data. Moreover, FWI_D depicts slightly greater monthly values during the winter and spring while FWI_M depicts greater values during the summer with a slight shift towards the middle of July when compared to the FWI-Interim values.

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