"Wildfires are unplanned fires, including lightning-caused
fires, unauthorized human-caused fires, and escaped
prescribed fire projects. States are responsible for
responding to wildfires that begin on nonfederal (state,
local, and private) lands, except for lands protected by
federal agencies under cooperative agreements. The federal
government is responsible for responding to wildfires that
begin on federal lands. The Forest Service (FS)—within the
U.S. Department of Agriculture—carries out wildfire
management and response across the 193 million acres of
the National Forest System (NFS). The Department of the
Interior (DOI) manages wildfire response for more than 400
million acres of national parks, wildlife refuges and
preserves, other public lands, and Indian reservations.
Wildfire statistics help to illustrate past U.S. wildfire
activity. Nationwide data compiled by the National
Interagency Coordination Center (NICC) indicate that the
number of annual wildfires is variable but has decreased
slightly over the last 30 years and the number of acres
affected annually, while also variable, generally has
increased (see Figure 1). Since 2000, an annual average of
70,072 wildfires has burned an annual average of 7.0
million acres. The acreage figure is more than double the
average annual acreage burned in the 1990s (3.3 million
acres), although a greater number of fires occurred annually
in the 1990s (78,600 average).."
Wildfires
Thursday, June 2, 2022
Wildfire Statistics
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