One of the more difficult issues facing those involved in the management of bushfires is assessing the likely impact of climate change on the bushfire threat. The combination of climate, topography and vegetation in many areas of Australia, and in parts of New Zealand, combine to produce one of the most severe fire environments in the world.
Conversely, fire has been part of most of these environments for millions of years, largely shaping the composition and distribution of the native plants, animals and ecosystems that survive today. Indeed, a significant proportion of Australia’s unique biota has become largely dependent on fire and the attendant variety of fire regimes for its continued existence and development.
Any possibility that conditions in current bushfire-prone areas may become hotter, drier, and/or windier or that such areas may experience more frequent extreme ‘fire weather’ days, must be factored into future planning by fire authorities, land managers and the community.
The fire and land management agencies who are partners in the Bushfire CRC and members of AFAC have identified the issue of possible climate change as one of the most important strategic issues confronting bushfire managers in Australia and New Zealand.
Research found in this area of this site examines the effects of climate change on ecosystems, fire weather and fire regimes and looks at the impact this will have on fire fighting operations.
Items in Climate Change: Research and reports
- Effect of Climate Change on New Zealand’s Future Fire Danger - August 2011
- Describing New Zealand’s Current Fire Climate Severity - August 2011
- Coastal Inundation and Climate Change - September 2010
- Alpine Soil as a Methane Sink: Controlling factors and fire effects - September 2010
- Impact of Climate Change on Fire in US National Parks - September 2010
- A Climate for Change? An institutional perspective on fire management's capacity to adapt climate - September 2010
- Can the Volunteer Emergency Management Sector Survive Climate Change? - September 2009
- Global Climate Change and Litter Decomposition- More Frequent Fire Slows Decomposition and Increases the Functional Importance of Inverterates - December 2009
- Assessing the Impact of Climate Change on Extreme Fire Weather Events Over South-Eastern Australia - August 2009
- The Impact of Climate Change on Fire & Emergency Services Now and in the Future - September 2008
- Accounting and Verification of Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Fire Management Programs in Northern Australia - September 2008
- Climate Change Adaptation, Disaster Risk Reduction and a Fire Management Policy Framework - September 2008
- Climate Change and Its Impact on the Management of Bushfire - November 2008
- International Challenge of Climate Change - November 2008
- Assessing the Impact of Climate Change on Extreme Fire Weather in Southeast Australia - December 2008
- Bushfire Weather in Southeast Australia: Recent Trends and Projected Climate Change Impacts - September 2007
- Bushfire Weather in Southeast Australia: Recent Trends and Projected Climate Change Impacts - September 2007
- Bushfire Weather: Trends and climate change impacts - September 2007
- Climate Change and Bushfire Weather in Southeast Australia - October 2007
- Interannual Variations of Area Burnt in Tasmanian Bushfires: Relationships with Climate and Predictability - October 2007
- Climate Change Research in the US Forest Service - June 2007
- Managing Non-operational Environmental Impacts of Fire Service Activity - February 2007
- Growth-climate Relations of Lodgepole Pine in the North Cascades - April 2007
- Planning for More Bushfires- Implications of Urban Growth and Climate Change - 2007
- Changing Worlds and Fire Regimes: Consequences of global change for bushfire risk management in the Sydney region - November 2006
- More Large Forest Fires Linked To Climate Change - July 2006
- Associations between Climate Change and Natural Systems in Australia - September 2005
- Impact of Climate Change on Long-term Fire Danger - June 2005
- Modest Climate Change Could Lead to Substantially More and Larger Fires - September 2004
- Climate Change and Bushfire Incidence - November 2004
- A Fire Danger Climatology for New Zealand - May 2003
- Climate and Severe Fire Seasons - March 2001








