Just watching an interesting program on Foxtel at the moment, and they're talking about the Victorian forests, how they have "evolved" to create "catastrophic fires".
If this is what is believed, do we tell people to go back into these areas.
According to Ross Bradstock(*) from University of Wollongong, there is no way to prevent major fires from happening.
Apart from the impact on life rebuilding in these could happen, other things like the impact on the economy it has in forever rebuilding these towns. Insurance - well, to be blunt, we all pay in our own premiums for these fires. Okay, live in the bush, but should people be allowed to build in towns like Cockatoo and Marysville? And I'm only talking about these towns, towns in the tall forests. There is no amount of planning that can prevent fires like the one we had the other day from having a similar impact like on Marysville.
There is a cycle happening here from the 1930s, 1980s, to now that every 20 years or so these catastrophic events are happening. They're starting to happen more frequently, which is scary.
Fuel reduction, no matter how much you do will not stop "major" fires like these according to Bradstock. You can reduce the risk, but you can't eliminate it.
In the Victorian case, the wet eucalypt forest isn't suitable for fuel reduction, and that's where we have towns that are developed. The forests have been evolved to burn catastrophically according to Bradstock, ie their existence depends on these fires.
So do we bite the bullet and say "no" to the rebuild at Marysville?