Introduction
Firefighters battle a brushfire in the Meadowlands in Carlstadt, N.J., on April 11, 2012. Drought, low humidity and strong winds were blamed for a rash of wildfires throughout the country this year. (Getty Images/Michael Bocchieri)
|
Record-setting heat and intense drought have made 2012 one of the worst wildfire seasons in a decade of intense fires. Climate change, residential development in fire-prone rural areas and the impact of past firefighting policies have combined to put many areas of the United States at risk, especially in the West. Federal agencies spend more than $2.5 billion yearly to control wildfires, and the cost is rising. Scientists widely agree that fire plays an important ecological role, and federal land managers are working to reintroduce fire in controlled settings to regenerate forests and reduce combustible brush that can cause wildfires to burn out of control. Public officials are under heavy pressure to fight fires that threaten homes, but few are willing to make homeowners bear more of the costs to protect their property. Using fire-resistant building materials and clearing brush around homes can reduce fire risks. Some advocates want to go further and bar new development in fire-prone areas.
|
|
|
 |
Mar. 17, 2023 |
Forever Chemicals |
 |
Sep. 02, 2022 |
Preserving the Seas |
 |
Jun. 17, 2022 |
Plastic Pollution |
 |
Dec. 17, 2021 |
Endangered Species |
 |
Nov. 06, 2020 |
Preventing Wildfires |
 |
Jul. 10, 2020 |
Circular Economy |
 |
Nov. 29, 2019 |
Climate Change and Health |
 |
Sep. 20, 2019 |
Extreme Weather |
 |
Dec. 07, 2018 |
Plastic Pollution |
 |
Dec. 02, 2016 |
Arctic Development |
 |
Apr. 22, 2016 |
Managing Western Lands |
 |
Jul. 18, 2014 |
Regulating Toxic Chemicals |
 |
Sep. 20, 2013 |
Future of the Arctic |
 |
Jun. 14, 2013 |
Climate Change |
 |
Nov. 06, 2012 |
Vanishing Biodiversity |
 |
Nov. 02, 2012 |
Managing Wildfires |
 |
Nov. 04, 2011 |
Managing Public Lands |
 |
Aug. 26, 2011 |
Gulf Coast Restoration |
 |
Jul. 2010 |
Plastic Pollution |
 |
Feb. 2010 |
Climate Change |
 |
Jan. 09, 2009 |
Confronting Warming |
 |
Dec. 05, 2008 |
Reducing Your Carbon Footprint |
 |
Nov. 2008 |
Carbon Trading |
 |
Oct. 03, 2008 |
Protecting Wetlands |
 |
Feb. 29, 2008 |
Buying Green |
 |
Dec. 14, 2007 |
Future of Recycling |
 |
Nov. 30, 2007 |
Disappearing Species |
 |
Feb. 2007 |
Curbing Climate Change |
 |
Dec. 01, 2006 |
The New Environmentalism |
 |
Jan. 27, 2006 |
Climate Change |
 |
Oct. 25, 2002 |
Bush and the Environment |
 |
Oct. 05, 2001 |
Invasive Species |
 |
Nov. 05, 1999 |
Saving Open Spaces |
 |
Jun. 11, 1999 |
Saving the Rain Forests |
 |
May 21, 1999 |
Setting Environmental Priorities |
 |
Mar. 19, 1999 |
Partisan Politics |
 |
Oct. 16, 1998 |
National Forests |
 |
Jun. 19, 1998 |
Environmental Justice |
 |
Aug. 23, 1996 |
Cleaning Up Hazardous Wastes |
 |
Mar. 31, 1995 |
Environmental Movement at 25 |
 |
Jun. 19, 1992 |
Lead Poisoning |
 |
May 15, 1992 |
Jobs Vs. Environment |
 |
Jan. 17, 1992 |
Oil Spills |
 |
Sep. 20, 1991 |
Saving the Forests |
 |
Apr. 26, 1991 |
Electromagnetic Fields: Are They Dangerous? |
 |
Sep. 08, 1989 |
Free Market Environmental Protection |
 |
Dec. 09, 1988 |
Setting Environmental Priorities |
 |
Jul. 29, 1988 |
Living with Hazardous Wastes |
 |
Dec. 20, 1985 |
Requiem for Rain Forests? |
 |
Aug. 17, 1984 |
Protecting the Wilderness |
 |
Jun. 15, 1984 |
Troubled Ocean Fisheries |
 |
Aug. 19, 1983 |
America's Disappearing Wetlands |
 |
Feb. 22, 1980 |
Noise Control |
 |
Nov. 16, 1979 |
Closing the Environmental Decade |
 |
Oct. 13, 1978 |
Toxic Substance Control |
 |
Feb. 27, 1976 |
Pollution Control: Costs and Benefits |
 |
Nov. 28, 1975 |
Forest Policy |
 |
May 30, 1975 |
Wilderness Preservation |
 |
Dec. 20, 1974 |
Environmental Policy |
 |
Nov. 14, 1973 |
Strip Mining |
 |
Dec. 01, 1971 |
Global Pollution |
 |
Jul. 21, 1971 |
Protection of the Countryside |
 |
Jan. 06, 1971 |
Pollution Technology |
 |
Jun. 19, 1968 |
Protection of the Environment |
 |
Oct. 30, 1963 |
Noise Suppression |
| | |
|