Banff is losing the race to prevent the type of disastrous wildfire that torched much of the town of Jasper, says a former Parks Canada environmental scientist.
The failure over decades to properly manage forests to protect the town of Banff doesn’t bode well for the survival of the busy mountain mecca, said Dr. Cliff White, who retired as environmental science manager for Banff National Park in 2009.
“It’s just so primed to burn, you can’t stop it – I don’t think Banff has time…Banff and Canmore are equally vulnerable and it’s a matter that we really need to get our heads around,” said White, now an environmental consultant with various projects in Canada’s oldest national park.
“It’s going to take 20 to 30 years (to do proper mitigation) and mother nature’s going to beat Banff before that.”
He made those comments less than a day after a massive wildfire howled into the town of Jasper, charring large swaths of it.
Jasper, he said “was probably the model community for the urban part of (wildfire prevention) and 5 km outside the town to reduce fuel but the next part of the puzzle was to reduce the next 10-15 km.”
“That’s the way it was for Slave Lake and Fort McMurray and Kelowna.”
Both towns and national parks face a “perfect storm created by our ecosystem, bugs and beetles, fuel, climate change and urbanization.”
Jasper, he said, was beset by pine beetles that killed trees and provided ideal fire fuel, what he termed wildfire “nuclear bombs.”
The failure over decades to properly manage forests to protect the town of Banff doesn’t bode well for the survival of the busy mountain mecca, said Dr. Cliff White, who retired as environmental science manager for Banff National Park in 2009.
'Primed to burn:' Former Parks Canada forestry scientist fears the worst for Banff — Calgary Herald
'It's just so primed to burn, you can't stop it,' said a former Parks Canada environmental scientist
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“It’s going to take 20 to 30 years (to do proper mitigation) and mother nature’s going to beat Banff before that.”
He made those comments less than a day after a massive wildfire howled into the town of Jasper, charring large swaths of it.
Jasper, he said “was probably the model community for the urban part of (wildfire prevention) and 5 km outside the town to reduce fuel but the next part of the puzzle was to reduce the next 10-15 km.”
“That’s the way it was for Slave Lake and Fort McMurray and Kelowna.”
Both towns and national parks face a “perfect storm created by our ecosystem, bugs and beetles, fuel, climate change and urbanization.”
Jasper, he said, was beset by pine beetles that killed trees and provided ideal fire fuel, what he termed wildfire “nuclear bombs.”