Hawaii Has Spent Decades Priming Itself For More Wildfires
The effects of a changing climate and a struggling agricultural sector have made conditions ripe. Experts have identified solutions but say reducing the risk requires investment.
For years, each new wildfire season in Hawaii has promised to be riskier than usual. This year, wildfire experts and climate forecasters are predicting a particularly dry summer ahead, which could lead to an especially bad wildfire season.
One reason is the decline of sugar and pineapple plantations that’s allowed fire-prone exotic grasses 鈥 fountain, guinea and other fast-growing invaders 鈥 to flourish on fallow agricultural land during periods of heavy rain, thereby increasing the fire risk in bone-dry conditions.
The loss of productive farmland beginning in the latter part of the 20th century overlaps with the acreage that most often burns during fire season, says state Fire Protection Forester Michael Walker.
Climate change is another aggravating factor that鈥檚 making Hawaii wildfires increasingly aggressive, according to longtime county firefighters. It’s also expected to alter the geography of wildfire risk in step with shifting precipitation patterns.
As dry leeward areas become drier, they鈥檒l lose out on rainfall that allows African grasses to thrive, thereby decreasing fire risk in established hotspots, according to Walker. The biggest fire risk is expected to gradually shift to new regions farther mauka, which have historically been too wet to easily ignite.
Calculating the risk, however, is difficult. That’s because nearly 99% of the state鈥檚 wildfires are sparked by humans, with about three-quarters of them being accidental. Less than 2% are naturally occurring fires triggered by either lightning strikes or lava, according to University of Hawaii researchers.
鈥淭here鈥檚 all this perfectly cured fuel out there in the form of unmanaged grasses and it all just depends if someone makes a mistake by welding in high wind conditions or parking on tall grass or intentionally setting fires,鈥 said Walker, who oversees the state Department of Land and Natural Resources鈥 .
鈥淪o we could skate through the entire summer and be totally fine with no ignitions or there could be total catastrophe due to accidents and arson,” he said. “We just don鈥檛 really know what will happen.鈥
Arson is what authorities say happened in Central Maui last week, leading police to arrest three suspects in connection with ignited over the course of an hour.
The fires did not damage any homes, but authorities said it was a close call. Encouraged by wind and dry conditions, the fires triggered neighborhood evacuations and hours-long traffic snarls.
Nearly two-thirds of Hawaii鈥檚 acreage is abnormally dry, according to the . The entire west end of Molokai and small pockets of Maui, Kahoolawe and the Big Island are already in extreme drought conditions.
鈥淚 like to call it the nouveau Hawaiian savannah,鈥 Walker said. 鈥淚f you can look outside at the landscape and it looks like it’s an African savannah but it doesn’t have gazelles and giraffes and things, you’re probably living in an area that’s highly susceptible to fire.鈥
‘Fires Are Going To Get Worse’
People tend to think of the western United States when conjuring images of devastating wildfires. But as a percent of total land area, Hawaii鈥檚 wildfires burn as much or more land each year than any other state, studies show.
University of Hawaii wildland fire researcher Clay Trauernicht has found that the area burned annually by wildfires in Hawaii has increased fourfold in recent decades. This is partially a product of climate change, which is bringing the islands wetter and stormier winters coupled with drier and hotter summers 鈥 conditions that intensify the wildfire threat, he said.
鈥淚f you asked me five years ago if climate change is affecting fires now I would probably have been pretty skeptical,鈥 Trauernicht said. 鈥淏ut at this point, mostly from talking with firefighters that are on the front lines, they鈥檙e all pretty convinced that they鈥檙e seeing conditions that they haven鈥檛 encountered before.鈥
The that scorched more than 42,000 acres of mostly grassland last summer on the slopes of the Big Island鈥檚 Mauna Kea above Waimea was one of the largest wildland fires in recorded state history. It blackened more than double the annual average of 20,000 acres that typically burn statewide, according to .
Firefighters who battled the Mana Road blaze noted its abnormal intensity in terms of flame length and rate of spread, Trauernicht said.
鈥淚t was total luck that it didn鈥檛 come around and swallow up Waikoloa,鈥 Traeurnicht said. 鈥淭he wind switched. But there was no stopping it without that change in wind direction. With fires like Mana Road, we鈥檙e seeing the limits of fire suppression.鈥
In 2019, record-breaking heat exacerbated fire conditions on Maui where a total of 25,000 acres burned 鈥 more than five times the amount of scorched earth than the previous year. Authorities arrested a 28-year-old homeless man on charges of arson in connection with the largest blaze that summer that of mostly former sugarcane fields in a matter of hours.
When it comes to wildfires, firefighters are the last line of defense. Preventative measures, such as clearing and managing invasive grasses on large swaths of land, are expensive and laborious, but underutilized and effective insurance policies against future fire risk, Traeurnicht said.
鈥淔ires are going to get worse,” Traeurnicht said. “But we actually know what to do about it. We know how to make our landscapes and our communities better adapted and more resilient. We just need the resources and the societal investment.鈥
Across DOFAW鈥檚 1 million acres statewide, the majority of invasive grass clearing and maintenance is done mechanically with bulldozers and other heavy machinery or chemically with herbicide sprays. The agency uses these tactics to maintain wide strips of land called fuel breaks intended to slow the spread of fire across vast acreage while offering access to firefighters.
It can be relentless work. In optimal conditions, guinea grass can grow six inches per day.
鈥淲e just need the resources and the societal investment.” 鈥 Clay Traeurnicht, wildfire researcher
Prescribed fire is another underutilized method of exotic grass control commonly used to burn off invasive grasses along Maui鈥檚 Haleakala Highway and at the .
The mouths of can also be deployed to feed on overgrown and highly combustible vegetation, thereby reducing fire risk while generating a revenue stream for ranchers.
Walker said the state doesn鈥檛 use herd animals to maintain its fire breaks, but he said it should consider doing so.
鈥淚t continues to be harder and harder to make any money from livestock these days because the profit margins are really, really tight for ranching in Hawaii,鈥 Walker said. 鈥淪o I see it as an opportunity for the public to benefit from grazing animals, and for ranchers to benefit as well because this could help sustain the livestock industry in this state.鈥
The proliferation of housing developments on former agricultural lands in recent decades presents another wildfire hazard that could be dampened by the development of a more robust farming sector, according to Walker.
鈥淚 think everyone knows the best and most profitable product that you can farm on ag land today is a house,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o you get brand new housing developments surrounded by invasive grass and now you’ve just created another fire problem.鈥
In this way, Hawaii鈥檚 food sustainability goals, which seek to revitalize the state鈥檚 once-thriving agriculture sector by putting the land back into production, could have positive effects for wildfire prevention.
Much of the state’s wildfire-prone acreage is privately owned, so DOFAW seeks out large private land owners to apply for federal grants to help with fuel reduction, since 鈥渇ire doesn’t know political boundaries,鈥 according to Walker. But there鈥檚 a need for more public-private landowner coordination, he said, as well as additional fuel reduction grant opportunities.
Walker said he鈥檇 like to see the state come up with a grant for ranchers, farmers and whole communities who want to invest in invasive grass management. Although there are federal funds available for this purpose, Walker said they don鈥檛 cover fence-building projects, for example, which could help ranchers deploy animal herds to clear and maintain fire breaks.
Civil Beat鈥檚 coverage of climate change is supported by the Environmental Funders Group of the Hawaii Community Foundation, Marisla Fund of the Hawaii Community Foundation and the Frost Family Foundation.
Civil Beat鈥檚 coverage of Maui County is supported in part by grants from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation and the Fred Baldwin Memorial Foundation.
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About the Author
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Brittany Lyte is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can reach her by email at blyte@civilbeat.org