Wildfire extreme events: Large-scale developments in fire activity of New South Wales, Australia

Disastrous wildfires have occurred in many parts of the world during the last two years (2019 and 2020), most notably in South America, Australia, the United States, and regions north of the polar circle. Such extreme wildfire events pose a pervasive threat to human lives and property and have thus...

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Main Authors: Nolde, Michael, Mueller, Norman, Strunz, Günter, Fichtner, Florian, Plank, Simon Manuel, Riedlinger, Torsten
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elib.dlr.de/142104/
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author Nolde, Michael
Mueller, Norman
Strunz, Günter
Fichtner, Florian
Plank, Simon Manuel
Riedlinger, Torsten
author_facet Nolde, Michael
Mueller, Norman
Strunz, Günter
Fichtner, Florian
Plank, Simon Manuel
Riedlinger, Torsten
author_sort Nolde, Michael
collection Unknown
description Disastrous wildfires have occurred in many parts of the world during the last two years (2019 and 2020), most notably in South America, Australia, the United States, and regions north of the polar circle. Such extreme wildfire events pose a pervasive threat to human lives and property and have thus been widely recognized in the global media. This study focusses on large-scale developments in fire activity. It investigates the occurrence of burnt areas regarding several relevant parameters, namely fire extent, fire severity and fire seasonality. The entirety of those parameters allows an extensive insight regarding large-scale, long-term fire activity trends. The burnt area derivation process, which is fully automated, is described in the literature (see reference below). The analysis is based on an extensive set of satellite data, specifically 9,612 granules of the MODIS MOD09/MYD09 product in conjunction with 3,503 tiles of the OLCI (Ocean and Land Colour Instrument) instrument onboard Sentinel-3. The study design consists of two parts: Firstly, the long-term temporal variability in fire activity, covering the time span from 2000 until 2020, is analyzed for the study region of New South Wales, Australia. Secondly, the large-scale spatial variability is investigated by comparing the New South Wales extreme events in 2019/2020 with events of comparable magnitude in California, US and the Siberian taiga. The study shows that New South Wales features an upward trend regarding the extent of yearly affected area, as well as a shift towards a prolongated end of the fire season towards the Autumn months. It also shows the exceptionality of the Australian wildfire activity in comparison with other geographical regions.
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Nolde, Michael und Mueller, Norman und Strunz, Günter und Fichtner, Florian und Plank, Simon Manuel und Riedlinger, Torsten (2021) Wildfire extreme events: Large-scale developments in fire activity of New South Wales, Australia. European Geosciences Union - General Assembly, 2021-04-19 - 2021-04-30, Wien, Österreich / Online.
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spelling ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:142104 2025-06-15T14:50:46+00:00 Wildfire extreme events: Large-scale developments in fire activity of New South Wales, Australia Nolde, Michael Mueller, Norman Strunz, Günter Fichtner, Florian Plank, Simon Manuel Riedlinger, Torsten 2021-04-30 application/pdf https://elib.dlr.de/142104/ en eng https://elib.dlr.de/142104/1/EGU21-8805-print.pdf Nolde, Michael und Mueller, Norman und Strunz, Günter und Fichtner, Florian und Plank, Simon Manuel und Riedlinger, Torsten (2021) Wildfire extreme events: Large-scale developments in fire activity of New South Wales, Australia. European Geosciences Union - General Assembly, 2021-04-19 - 2021-04-30, Wien, Österreich / Online. cc_by Georisiken und zivile Sicherheit Konferenzbeitrag NonPeerReviewed 2021 ftdlr 2025-06-04T04:58:10Z Disastrous wildfires have occurred in many parts of the world during the last two years (2019 and 2020), most notably in South America, Australia, the United States, and regions north of the polar circle. Such extreme wildfire events pose a pervasive threat to human lives and property and have thus been widely recognized in the global media. This study focusses on large-scale developments in fire activity. It investigates the occurrence of burnt areas regarding several relevant parameters, namely fire extent, fire severity and fire seasonality. The entirety of those parameters allows an extensive insight regarding large-scale, long-term fire activity trends. The burnt area derivation process, which is fully automated, is described in the literature (see reference below). The analysis is based on an extensive set of satellite data, specifically 9,612 granules of the MODIS MOD09/MYD09 product in conjunction with 3,503 tiles of the OLCI (Ocean and Land Colour Instrument) instrument onboard Sentinel-3. The study design consists of two parts: Firstly, the long-term temporal variability in fire activity, covering the time span from 2000 until 2020, is analyzed for the study region of New South Wales, Australia. Secondly, the large-scale spatial variability is investigated by comparing the New South Wales extreme events in 2019/2020 with events of comparable magnitude in California, US and the Siberian taiga. The study shows that New South Wales features an upward trend regarding the extent of yearly affected area, as well as a shift towards a prolongated end of the fire season towards the Autumn months. It also shows the exceptionality of the Australian wildfire activity in comparison with other geographical regions. Conference Object taiga Unknown
spellingShingle Georisiken und zivile Sicherheit
Nolde, Michael
Mueller, Norman
Strunz, Günter
Fichtner, Florian
Plank, Simon Manuel
Riedlinger, Torsten
Wildfire extreme events: Large-scale developments in fire activity of New South Wales, Australia
title Wildfire extreme events: Large-scale developments in fire activity of New South Wales, Australia
title_full Wildfire extreme events: Large-scale developments in fire activity of New South Wales, Australia
title_fullStr Wildfire extreme events: Large-scale developments in fire activity of New South Wales, Australia
title_full_unstemmed Wildfire extreme events: Large-scale developments in fire activity of New South Wales, Australia
title_short Wildfire extreme events: Large-scale developments in fire activity of New South Wales, Australia
title_sort wildfire extreme events: large-scale developments in fire activity of new south wales, australia
topic Georisiken und zivile Sicherheit
topic_facet Georisiken und zivile Sicherheit
url https://elib.dlr.de/142104/