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Wildfire Statistics


Wildfires are unplanned and unwanted fires, including
lightning-caused fires, unauthorized human-caused fires,
and escaped prescribedfire projects. States are responsible
for responding to wildfires that begin onnonfederal (state,
local, and private) lands, except for lands protectedby
federal agencies under cooperative agreements. The federal
government  is responsible forresponding 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 The Department of the Interior
(DOI) manages  wildfire response for more than 400 million
acres of national parks,wildlife refuges andpreserves, other
public lands, and Indianres ervations.

Wildfire statistics help to illustrate past U.S. wildfire
activity. Nationwide data compiled by the National
Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) indicate that the number of
annual wildfires is variable but has decreased slightly over
the last 30 years and that the number of acres burned
annually, while also variable, generally has increased (see
Figure 1). Every year since 2000, an average of71,300
wildfires burned an average of 6.9 million acres. This figuie
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 on average).

Table  I. Annual Wildfires and Acres Burned

                  2015    2016    2017   2018    2019
Number   of Fires (thousands)
Federal           13.8    12.6    15.2    12.5    10.9
    FS             7.1    5.7     6.6     5.6     5.3
    DOI           6.6     6.8      7.3    7.0     5.3
Nonfederal        54.4    55.2    56.4    45.6   39.6
Total             68.2    67.7    71.5    58.1   50.5
Acres Burned  (millions)
Federal           7.41    3.00    6.3     4.6     3.1
    FS            1.92    1.25    2.9     2.3     0.6
    DOI           5.47    1.70    3.3     2.3     2.3
Nonfederal        2.72    2.51    3.7     4.1     1.6
Total             10.13   5.51    10.0    8.8     4.7
Source: National Interagency Fire Center (N IFC).
Notes: Federalincludesfires that began on land managed bythe
Forest Service (FS), Department of the Interior (DOI), and other
federal agencies (not listed). Nonfederal includes all other lands.
Column totals may not add dueto rounding.


Figure I. Annual Wildfires and Acres Burned
(1990-20 19)


Source: National Interagency Fire Center (N IFC).
Note: Data reflect wild land fires and acres burned nationwide,
including wild land fires on federal and nonfederal lands.
Over the past 10years, there were an average of 64,100
wildfires annually and an average of 6.8 million acres
burned annually. In 2019, 50,477 wildfires burned 4.7
million acres nationwide, below the annual average for both
statistics. More thanhalf of the acreage burned in 2019 was
in Alaska (2.5 million acres), which was the only area that
experienced significantly above-average wildfire activity
for the year. The 2015 fire season was the largest onrecoud,
with 10.1 million acres burned (see Figure 2); more than
half of these acres were in Alaska (5.1 million acres).

As of September 1, 2020, nearly 40,000 wildfires have
burned over4.0million acres this year. The nationwide
preparedness levelis at the maximum level (5), indicating
significant commitment ofsharedresources.

Figure 2. Top Five Years with Largest Wildfire
Acreage  Burned  Since 1960
   Year    Acres burned (millions)       Number of Fires
   2015

   20.17                                          5

   2006

   2007                                        3'2K.

   2012P

Source: NIFC.

The number  offires and acreageburned are indicators of
the annual level of wildfire activity, but they may be
misleading, since many fires may occur in large, relatively
undeveloped areas, with very little impact to human
development or connunities. Acreage burned also does not


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Updated September  1, 2020


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