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A conversation about bushfires, climate change, traditional knowledge and western science

By Vic Jurskis - posted Monday, 1 June 2020


However, in NSW, it is illegal to do ecologically sustainable burning. The Bush Fire Environmental Assessment Code specifies minimum intervals between burning of 10 years in dry shrubby forests and 30 years in moist shrubby forests, which are incorrectly classified as wet sclerophyll forests. Nearly all forests in NSW have been invaded by unnaturally dense shrub layers as a result of lack of mild burning.

The allowable burning intervals were developed on the basis of a disproven hypothesis, founded on false assumptions, that frequent burning will eliminate so-called obligate-seeding plants which actually thrived through tens of thousands of years of Aboriginal burning. In the initial stages of development they were widely known as the Bradstock Intervals.

3 western science does not have all the answers

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When traditional burning expert, Victor Steffensen, criticises western science he's unintentionally offending fair dinkum scientists who are well and truly on the same side with him, as regards traditional knowledge. These scientists are experienced in using mild fire to maintain a healthy, safe and diverse landscape. People like Neil Burrows, Phil Cheney, Lachie McCaw, David Packham, Rick Sneeuwjagt and Roger Underwood have done it, measured it, reasoned it through and tested their conclusions. They have been able to safely control wildfires under severe conditions in treated areas.

So-called western science, promulgated by acclaimed experts such as Bowman and Bradstock, doesn't have the answers because it's based neither on experience, nor on the scientific method. Without careful observations and experience, academics have dreamt up hypotheses that burning is bad for the environment, and they've made computer models to prove that it doesn't work. These fire ecologists are blind to the big picture, that mild burning is ecological maintenance, not hazard reduction. It prevents hazards from accumulating and choking out biodiversity. Victor Steffensen knows that without the right fire, we get upside-down country – thin on top and thick underneath. Management based on western science gives us damp soils and sick trees with lazy roots. Fairdinkum Science supports Traditional Knowledge in all respects. Upside-down country chokes out biodiversity and fuels gigafires.

Ironically, when Professor Bowman was working at the Centre for Indigenous Natural and Cultural Resource Management & Faculty of Science at Northern Territory University, he wrote that:

"it is not clear whether or not Aborigines had a predictive ecological knowledge of the long-term consequences of their use of fire … The sparse available evidence does not support the hypotheses that Aboriginal burning … was critical for the maintenance of habitats of small mammals that have become extinct following European colonization ". It seems that Bowman has had a personal quantum shift and has belatedly caught up with public awareness.

Professor Bradstock seems to have had a change of heart too, though it's difficult to judge. Having firstly pronounced that a minimum of 30% of the landscape must be treated to have any effect, then decided that mild burning mostly doesn't work anyway for biogeographical reasons, he recently stated that, due to climate change: funding for hazard reduction burns would need to increase fivefold just to hold the threat to lives and property at current levels. That means NSW alone would have to spend $500 million a year to maintain the status quo, and even more to reduce the risk of repeating the death and destruction of this summer's fires.

Only two years ago, Bradstock declared that lack of burning wasn't a factor in the destruction of 60 homes at Tathra. He maintained that broadscale burning is ineffective, whilst narrow (< 50m) breaks can create "defensible space" around houses. But the Professor admitted that houses were ignited by long distance ember storms driven by high winds. The Tathra fire jumped the Bega River and much of town because it was fed by heavy three-dimensionally continuous fuels in long unburnt bush far away. Experts who haven't been there and done it seem to have difficulty understanding that firebreaks and waterbombers are useless during extreme weather in a landscape that contains explosive fuels – no matter how much distance there is between wilderness and people.

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I find it scary that Professor Bradstock will be assisting NSW's behind-closed-doors Bushfire Inquiry, not as a witness, but as an expert adviser. The fox is minding the chooks and the outcome is pre-ordained. Bradstock's predecessor at Wollongong University, Professor Whelan, sat on the COAG Inquiry that effectively visited ongoing holocaust upon us. There seems little prospect that the latest Bushfires Royal Commission will change anything for the better. Though gigafires are clearly an unnatural consequence of human neglect, it is officially The Royal Commission into National Natural Disaster Arrangements. Of three Commissioners, Professor Andrew Macintosh is "one of Australia's preeminent experts on climate change mitigation".

God help us!

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About the Author

Vic Jurskis has been a forester for 40 years. He has published extensively in academic journals. He is the author of Firestick Ecology: fairdinkum science in plain English (Connor Court, 2015).

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