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Study to Look at Benefits of Livestock for Fire Fuel Reduction and Fire Safety

February 15, 2020 – By Devii R. Rao, Acting San Benito County Director and Area Livestock and Natural Resources Advisor – Thanks to generous support from the newly formed California Cattle Council, UC Cooperative Extension will begin conducting a study to estimate how much fuel livestock consume across California and whether grazing decreases wildfire speed and intensity. Livestock grazing is the most widespread (and often the only feasible) management practice to reduce fire hazard from herbaceous fuels in California rangelands. Despite that, many public land management agencies do not allow livestock grazing on their lands. A study from 1983 found that the rate of combustion of grazed grasslands was reduced by 58%, but there is a dearth of research in this area. As we confront more frequent and devastating wildfires, we need better information about the effects of grazing on fire fuels in California.

We will use rangeland cattle movements from state brand inspection data, data from the United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Agricultural Census, and County Crop Reports to estimate tons of forage (fuel) consumed by California livestock. We will combine these datasets and others to estimate if/how grazing influences how wildfire moves across the landscape. We expect that additional livestock grazing, especially at the wildland urban interface (WUI) could drastically reduce the speed and intensity of fire, providing firefighters far greater time to respond to wildfire. Results from our study will be available this summer.

Please feel free to contact Devii at drorao@ucanr.edu if you have questions about this project.

rangeland

Rangeland

Source: UC ANR

 

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Get to Know Mariposa County RCD!

Source: California Association of Resource Conservation Districts

 

Get to Know Mariposa County RCD

The eastern section of Mariposa County RCD is the central portion of Yosemite National Park

The eastern section of Mariposa County RCD is the central portion of Yosemite National Park

The Mariposa County Resource Conservation District (RCD) is a medium sized, rural RCD in the western foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, north of Fresno, east of Merced, and southeast of Stockton. The district’s eastern section is the central portion of Yosemite National Park. They have worked on a variety of programs such as technical assistance for farmers and ranchers, involvement with creating local Integrated Regional Water Management Plans, supporting the Mariposa County Firesafe Council, invasive plant control, and soil health and soil erosion control. Being at the foothills of the western Sierras and surrounded by forests, one of the greatest needs of their community is conservation work around forest health and fire resiliency.

Mariposa County RCD recently obtained two large grants from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection’s (CAL FIRE) California Climate Investments Forest Health grant program totaling $2 million in order to implement fuels reduction, reforestation, and biomass utilization projects. The RCD will remove 3,222 tons of dead and downed trees, which will be converted into energy or biochar.

They also play an integral role in developing the Mariposa Biomass Project and have secured $5.2 million in grant funding for the project. They currently have a Wood Innovations Grant from the US Forest Service for $248,000 to facilitate final tasks for a group of four community scale biomass plants: Mariposa, CHIPS, Camptonville, and Nevada County.

Along with reducing hazardous fuels, the RCD released 14 videos on their new YouTube channel. The short videos give information for homeowners who want to reduce the risk of wildfire on their property, and cover:

  • Reducing wildfire danger
  • Tree mortality scenarios
  • Forest health
  • Defensible space, home hardening and access roads
  • Cost sharing programs and insurance availability
  • Neighborhood groups

The videos were created from presentations given by local experts— CAL FIRE, University of California Cooperative Extension, fire history expert George Gruell, and others— and have been approved for content by CAL FIRE. There is also a video that gives instructions on how the videos were created using existing PowerPoint presentations and adding voice over. The RCD’s hope is that other communities can use this tool to create their own video presentations. Please visit Mariposa.R.C.D YouTube channel today, and click on Subscribe.

Mariposa County RCD’s tree mortality workshop with speakers from CAL FIRE and the U.S. Forest Service. The RCD’s YouTube channel was created in an effort to make this same information accessible to everyone online.

Most recently, they submitted grants for water storage for fire protection through the Integrated Regional Water Management Prop 1 grant program and the Bureau of Reclamation, one of which is a tribal project for the Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation. Visit their Facebook page to get the RCD’s latest news.

 

 

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January 2020 To April 2020 Fuels, Fire and Weather Assessment For Central And Southern California

January 2020 To April 2020 Fuels, Fire and Weather Assessment For Central And Southern California Report Finds Winter Precipitation Expected to be Below Normal for the Rest of Winter into Early Spring

 

 Temperatures Above Normal through March.

 Winter Precipitation Below Normal rest of winter into early spring.

 Near Normal number of offshore wind events January.

 Early onset of spring “grassfire season” possible in April.

Weather Discussion

January 2, 2020 – The cool, wet weather pattern which suddenly emerged in November continued into December as several cold-core storm systems visited the state. While a few of these had a subtropical assessment 1connection, most of the precipitation across Southern California arrived courtesy of storms begat from the Gulf of Alaska. As such, these storms brought heavy snow to relatively low elevations, especially across the Angeles and San Bernardino National Forests. Many of these storms remained off the coast, which caused the heaviest precipitation in Central California to be focused from the San Joaquin Valley westward. While much of the desert continued to see well above normal precipitation last month, curiously, the Sierras experienced slightly below average precipitation in December (Image 1, below).

Offshore wind events were infrequent during the past month and of comparatively weaker strength than the events of October and early November. Temperatures were generally on the cool side which, along with short daylight hours and a low solar angle, allowed for much of the precipitation to recharge subsoils without much waste in the form of evaporation.

This winter seems to be shaping up to be one of those years where there are really no solid clues to ascertain what sort of long range weather pattern may emerge during the next few months. The PNA and NAO indices are flat. The current ENSO index is weakly positive, but continues to trend slowly downward toward neutral.

assessment 2

Furthermore, SST anomaly patterns that were seemingly becoming dominant the past few months have recently reversed themselves. The Niño 1+2 region off the South American coast has seen significant warming in December which may negate any chance of seeing a Modoki El Niño from developing this season. But warmer than normal SST’s remain over the Gulf of Alaska, albeit a bit less pronounced and without the large area of spuriously warm water over the Central Pacific compared to last month (Image 2, below).

The majority of long range models had been consistent in showing well below normal precipitation this winter across California and much of the Southwest. The axis of lowest precipitation compared to normal has shifted northward into Northern CA with several NMME members bringing the driest conditions into the Pacific Northwest (Image 3, below). It remains to be seen whether the strong jet stream that we’ve seen this winter will continue to be the biggest player in the weather, or if a blocking (or perhaps split-flow) pattern will eventually win out.

Long range models are still keen on the concept of drier than average weather the rest of the winter with some of the greater deficits occurring in January and February. This is our prediction as well, but forecaster confidence remains lower than normal at this juncture. Temperature outlooks are a bit more clear cut with a high likelihood of warmer than normal temperatures through spring.

assessment 3

FUELS AND DROUGHT OUTLOOK

Widespread, significant precipitation occurring near the winter solstice is usually enough to keep large fire potential low in ensuing weeks and this year should be no exception. The mountains have near or above normal snowpack for this time of year, while lower elevations are seeing rapid growth of seasonal grasses. If the weather turns warm and dry for a period of time during the next month or two, fire spread should be limited to windy periods and confined to elevations above seasonal grass growth, but below the alpine areas which should still have snow cover.

Looking ahead to the late winter and early spring timeframe, if the outlook for below normal precipitation and warmer than normal temperatures come to fruition, grasses may cure out a few weeks early this year. The spike in grass fire activity may occur in April versus May. Thus, if fine fuels become available for ignition earlier this year, there is a greater opportunity for receptive fuels to be present during “offshore wind season” which usually extends from late September into early May. At the current time, all guidance continues to indicate a near normal rate of offshore winds the next few months, but an earlier curing of grasses may allow for a greater opportunity for receptive fuels to be present during a time of year when offshore winds are more prevalent. Therefore, large fire potential may rise to an above normal potential by April over Southern California.

Last year was a very quiet fire season across the western U.S. This summer may be more active across the West and there may be more competition outside of the region for resources. Look for higher preparedness levels nationally with an earlier onset to the 2020 fire season overall. Locally, the highest potential this season (and perhaps for many seasons to come) will likely be in the Sierra Foothills due to a dense stand of bug killed timber. It is too soon to predict whether this will be an active monsoon season, but since storms were so infrequent last year, there will probably be a greater risk of lightninggenerated ignitions compared to 2019.

assessment 4

 

 

 

Source: https://goldrushcam.com/sierrasuntimes/index.php/news/local-news/21508-january-2020-to-april-2020-fuels-fire-and-weather-assessment-for-central-and-southern-california-report-finds-winter-precipitation-expected-to-be-below-normal-for-the-rest-of-winter-into-early-spring

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Mariposa Biomass Project – Good News From Sweden! – 22 Dec 2019

No photo description available.

 

Good news from Sweden!

Cortus Energy has reached MILESTONE 2 (3) in Höganäs. The plant is now technically completed and ready for hot operation.

Cortus has the pleasure to announce that our first commercial WoodRoll® plant (6 MW) in Höganäs is technically completed, including third-party certificates, instruction manuals and check-out of all components. The control system is now fully implemented and quality assured.

Firing and hot tests (up to 1 100°C) with Natural gas has been completed and, with the approval of the Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB), MILESTONE 2 (3) has been achieved. Cortus will accordingly invoice Höganäs Sweden AB SEK 1.25 million.

“It is a great pleasure that we now have a plant ready for hot operation. At the same time, I am both moved and relieved by what we have achieved so far that gives both hope and new expectations for 2020”, says Cortus Founder Rolf Ljunggren.

Now the test program continues with full focus on MILESTONE 3 (3), which means delivery of renewable syngas at agreed quality without interruption for 168 hours (7 days). The goal is to reach MILESTONE 3 (3) at the end of the first quarter of 2020, when an additional SEK 1.25 million will be invoiced. Demonstration will follow and the delivery of renewable syngas to Höganäs is expected to begin in the second half of 2020.

 

 

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