Project no. Fp6-018505 Project Acronym fire paradox



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3Methods


The main tool to obtain the required information for the identification and classification of wildfire detection techniques within the framework of Forest Plans was an inquiry enclosed in a questionnaire formulated by the University Complutense of Madrid (UCM team) with the cooperation of all the partners in Module 7. The questionnaire provided us data about the key issues of legislation, policies, practices, detection, cooperation and other territorial policies influencing wildfires at the national and regional level, which is going to be used for the different deliverables belonging to the Module 71. The present report considered only the section on detection (see Annex 1).

The Instituto Superior de Agronomia (ISA/CEABN team), through the European Commission (EC), officially sent the questionnaire in November 2006 to the members of the Forest Fire Prevention Expert Group (WGFFP), a working group associated with the European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS) established by the Joint Research Centre (JRC) of the Commission. Experts from the national authorities nominated by the EU Member States and the EC compose this expert group, as they deal with operational issues related to wildfire prevention and fighting, have a complete and exhaustive knowledge about wildfires in their countries and have privileged access to information sources on these issues. For the North African countries (Morocco and Tunisia) and other Member States without any representative member in the WGFFP, the questionnaire was sent through the partners involved in the Module 7 to the respective policy-maker.

The questionnaire replies received until the deliverable deadline of the report (April 2008) includes 16 countries: Austria, Bulgaria, Cyprus, France, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Morocco, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and Tunisia.

For the different study cases elaborated by each partner, the methodology used was documental analysis and interviews with national fire detection experts.

Concerning the analysis of the fire detection systems, we selected the Iberian Peninsula (Portugal and Spain) to be the case study. For these two countries, we gathered, processed and analysed the official wildfire databases corresponding to the period from 2001 to 2007. That information was than integrated in a Geographic Information System (GIS), in order to enable performing a spatio-temporal analysis.

4Inquiry results and discussion


The results presented in this chapter concern the five study cases presented by each member, partner to this Fire Paradox Work package, namely France, Morocco, Poland, Portugal and Spain, and include the inquiry analysis.

At the end of this chapter a discussion is presented together with the results of the inquiry, integrating the data collected by the questionnaire and the data from the different study cases.


4.1France Case study

4.1.1Legal framework


France is divided into 100 administrative units called departments (including 4 overseas departments). These are grouped into 26 regions. Civil defence (including forest fire prevention and fire fighting) is managed at a dedicated administrative level called “Zone”. France is divided into 7 civil defence zones. The southern half of France is considered as the only part affected by forest fires. 32 departments are concerned, belonging to the South Zone and the South West Zone. The two departments belonging to the South East zone that are concerned by forest fire are treated with the South Zone.

In these 32 departments, law n°2001-602 of July 9th 2001 prescribes local or regional plans for forest fire prevention. The State representative in the department, called the “Préfet”, must elaborate these plans. These plans define the fire prevention policy, including surveillance, fire detection and fire fighting.

Figure 7 - French departments with a potential forest fire danger



a) National level

Surveillance and fire detection involves several ministries and organisms with local structures. Organisation of fire detection varies from one department to another. The most involved ministries and organisms are listed below, but some secondary actors may be implied punctually. Communication and cooperation between those numerous actors is therefore essential.

Several ministries are involved:

The Ministry of Agriculture is in charge of fire prevention. On the field, 2 organisms are involved: the National Forest Office (ONF°- Office National des Forêts) and the local representative of the ministry in each department: Departmental Directorate of Agriculture (DDAF – Direction Départementale de l’Agriculture). The DDAF is unequally active in fire prevention, depending on the department. In some departments, the ONF plays a central part in fire detection, organising patrols and/or the lookout towers network.

The Home Office (Directorate for Civil Protection) is responsible for fire fighting, managing aerial means and therefore is involved in aerial detection. In each department, the local structure managing fire fighting means is the SDIS (Service Departemental d’Incendie et de Secours). Their operational centre is called CODIS (Centre Opérationnel Départemental d’Incendie et de Secours). Within the territory of the department, they centralise alerts and dispatch the means. They also decide when and how fire detection has to be organised. In some departments, they are responsible for local aerial fire detection. The SDIS is under the authority of the “Préfet”.

The Ministry of Public Works includes meteorology and the fire danger rating system. In each department, a local meteorological centre (CDM - Centre Départemental de Météo-France) centralises meteorological data and provides information for the fire danger rating system.

The Ministry of Defence provides additional fire fighting or fire detection teams.

b) Zone and department level

At the level of civil defence zones, one operational centre (Etat-major de Zone – EMZ) is located in Bordeaux for the South West Zone and another one near Marseilles (Valabre), for the South zone. One additional centre is located in Ajaccio, Corsica . In the South Zone, the EMZ centralises data (meteo, vegetation index, …) and creates the corresponding maps. Routes for aerial patrols are designed from these maps.

Department councils are financially involved in fire detection. They contract specific staff “Forestiers-Sapeurs” involved in surveillance in summer and in maintenance works for fire fighting equipment (tracks, water reserves) during the rest of the year. These teams were created in 1973 but do not exist in every department.

c) Local level

Several other structures are involved in fire detection. Their members are volunteers.

Some communities have created committees for forest fire prevention (CCFF- Comités Communaux Feux de Forêts). Namely, they are involved in fire detection through ground patrols and in lookout towers. The equipment available for the CCFF varies a lot from one to another. These teams are usually activated by the town hall.

These structures do not exist in the South West Zone, but this area has specific associations dedicated to fire prevention (ASA – Associations Syndicales Autorisées) gathering forest owners.


4.1.2Fire danger rating system


Surveillance and fire detection are activated only when a fire danger exists. So, it is important, to understand the fire detection systems, to know how fire danger is rated.

Fire danger is rated for the whole South of France, divided into 116 meteorological zones.

Meteorologists provide the index twice a day. It is based on 3 indices but the final result includes expert knowledge. The final danger rating scale has 6 levels (Table 1):

Table 1 - Fire danger scale



Level

French label

Meaning

1

Faible (F)

Low

2

Léger (L)

Light

3

Modéré (M)

Moderate

4

Sévère (S)

Severe

5

Très sévère (TS)°

Very Severe

6

Exceptionnel (E)

Exceptional

The fire danger rate is available for the various organisms involved in fire prevention through a dedicated Web Site. Besides the fire danger rating, additional explanations are also provided.

4.1.3Fire detection systems


Terrestrial fixed lookout posts are either:

  • dedicated permanent buildings or pylons ; the highest is 40 meters high ; some of them can host the lookout workers;

  • temporary buildings (set up at the beginning of the fire season, removed at the end of the fire season);

  • specific high spots from which one can see a large area, without any specific building.

Figure 8 - Watch tower - light structure - SW France



a) National Network of Lookout Towers (NNLT)

Lookout towers are to detect smokes and to inform the CODIS about the precise location of the fire, the areas potentially threatened by the fire and the development of fires. Lookout workers are in charge with:



  • visual surveillance (with binoculars) of the area visible from the tower;

  • localising fire and informing the CODIS (operational centre for fire fighting);

  • pointing on maps all activities generating smoke or dust (such as stone quarries, rubbish tips, …) to avoid confusion with real forest fire smoke;

  • collecting meteorological data;

  • radio transmission.

The lookout workers use binoculars, maps and radio stations connected to the surveillance communication network. In some lookout towers compass or alidade are also available.

Lookout towers workers are firefighters, students or people with a good knowledge of the field. These people only need a pair of binoculars to identify the location of the smoke they detect. In other cases, compass or alidade is used.

The number of lookout towers varies a lot from one department to another, depending on the size of forest areas and on the characteristics of the relief. Besides, each forested area should be visible from 2 or 3 lookout simultaneously, to allow a precise localisation of fires.

Lookout towers are operated during the fire season (roughly 2 months in summer in the South of France, and 7 months in the South West of France). The exact period is defined by the local CODIS according to the fire danger rate and may vary from one year to another and from one department to another.

The daily surveillance period is adjusted according to the distribution of fires during the day. It also depends on the availability of staff and financial means.

Table 2 shows the number of lookout posts in each region, the staff and the period they are used.

Table 2 - Number of lookout posts in each region, period and time of activation


Region

lookout posts

Type

Staff

Activation

By

Period

Time

Aquitaine

45

Buildings

42 with SW

3 with F


CODIS

03/01 to 10/31

10-13h to 17-20h, depending on the season

Haute Corse

4

Building

SW, FS

Townhall

07/11-09/11

10h/18h

2

High spots without buildings

FS

Townhall

07/15-09/15

10h/18h

Languedoc-Roussillon

9

High spots without
buildings

SW

CODIS

07/01 (or 07/14)-09/15

11h30/23h30

63

Buildings

37 with SW

17 with F

9 with F+SW


CODIS (12 by DDAF in Gard)

07/01 (or 07/14)-09/15

11h to 20 or 21 h

1

Automatic detection
system (Gard)




ONF

07/01-09/18

-

Poitou Charentes

9

Buildings

7 with SW
2 with ONF

SDIS and ONF

03/15 or 07/1 to 10/15 or 08/31

11h30 - 19h30

Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur

12

High spots without buildings

10 with F

2 with FS



5 by CODIS

2 by ONF


5 by SDIS + DDAF

Generally from fire danger level “SEVERE”

Between 10-13h to 19 or 20 h

151

Buildings

93 with CCFF

29 with SW

9 with FS

7 with F


5 with DDAF

4 with F+SW

3 with ONF

1 with FS+F



90 by Town Hall

40 by CODIS

11 by ONF

5 by DDAF

4 by SDIS + DDAF

1 by DDAF/CODIS



06/23 or 07/01 to 09/10 or 10/30

(29 with CCFF on week ends only)



Between 10-13h to 19 or 20 h

Rhône
-Alpes


5

Buildings

SW

CODIS

07/01-09/15

10h/22h

11

Vehicles on High spots

F

CODIS

From very severe fire risk

11h/21h

Used
Abbreviations


F: Firemen – FS: « Forestier Sapeurs » - SW: Seasonal worker – ONF: « Office National des Forêts (National Forest office) – CODIS: Centre Opérationnel Départemental d’Incendie et de Secours (Departmental coordination centre) – SDIS: Service Départemental d’Incendie et de Secours – DDAF: Direction Départementale de l’Agriculture et de la Forêt (Departemental authority of the Ministry of Agriculture and Forest) – CCFF: Comité Communaux Feux de Forêt (Volunteer brigades)

In spite of the efforts made for a judicious distribution of lookout towers, some shadow areas remain and mobile brigades must complement this system.



b) Mobile Brigades

Two types of mobile brigades perform surveillance and detection, in addition to the look out towers network:



  • mobile brigades able to perform first attack

  • other mobile brigades.

Besides surveillance itself, mobile brigades also play a part in dissuasion, public informing and guiding fire suppression means arriving to the fire location.

In 2005, the Ministry of Agriculture financed 4 334 patrolling days, for the whole country.

i) “First attack” mobile brigades include 2 persons and a 4X4 vehicle (called “Dangel”) with a 600-liter water reserve and a pump. They are distributed on the field so as to be able to be on the spot of a fire within 10 minutes. They should be able to perform first attack and extinguish the fire or at least master the fire. The teams belong to the Forest Fire Service (firemen), Forest Service (ONF, DDAF), Departmental Service (“Forestiers-Sapeurs”) and volunteers from local fire prevention teams (CCFF). Some teams mix members of the various services, namely a fireman and a forester. This kind of team is very efficient because the fireman has the knowledge of fire behaviour and the forester knows the field well. The field is divided in sectors for each brigade. Each brigade covers an area from 2 500 to 3 000 hectares, following a predefined route or patrolling freely within its sector. In some cases, the brigade has to stop at given high spots to watch shadow areas not visible from the lookout towers. The number of brigades in each region is presented in Table 3.

Table 3 - Number of mobile brigades in each region, period and time of activation




Region

N

Type of vehicle

Staff

Activation

By

Date

Time

Haute Corse

96

to 101


29 Dangel or equivalent

other vehicles



52 FS, 14 ONF, 6 SP, 29 other associations

CODIS

07/15 to 09/15

10-11h30 to 19 h

Languedoc-Roussillon

239

150 Dangels or equivalent

57 other vehicles

20 motorbikes

12 patrols with horses



53 F, 48 FS, 44 Mixed, 34 ONF, 19 CCFF, 18 SW, 17 ONF/DDAF, 6 other

CODIS

07/01 to end august,

mid or end September 09/11 or 09/18 or 09/30



11h-12h to 19-20h

or 13h-14h to 20h-21 h



Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur

608 to 618

432 Dangel or equivalent

130 other vehicles

40 motorbikes

13 patrols with horses

3 boats


285 CCFF, 151 ONF, 100 F, 41 FS, 23 Mixed, 18 Other

CODIS or DDAF

Town Halls for CCFF



End June to mid September

or 07/01-09/30

only on week ends for some CCFF


11h-12h to 19h-20 h

18h-24 h for boats

13h-20h for some CCFF


Rhône
-Alpes


39

28 Dangels or equivalent

11 other vehicles



14 Mixed, 6 ONF, 10 F, 9 FS

CODIS or DDAF and CODIS

07/01 – 09/30

14 on week ends only



11h-14h

or 11h-20h




Used
Abbreviations


F: Firemen – FS: « Forestiers Sapeurs » - SW: Seasonal worker – ONF: « Office National des Forêts (National Forest office) – CODIS: Centre Opérationnel Départemental d’Incendie et de Secours (Departmental coordination centre) – SDIS: Service Départemental d’Incendie et de Secours – DDAF: Direction Départementale de l’Agriculture et de la Forêt (Departemental authority of the Ministry of Agriculture and Forest) – CCFF: Comités Communaux Feux de Forêt (Volunteer brigades)

ii) Other mobile brigades have the same duties as the previous ones, except fire extinction. They usually include one vehicle and one person, from the same services as above, plus Natural or Regional Parks. They cover an area between 40 000 and 50 000 ha. A few departments use horse brigades or motorbikes brigades.

iii) Armed Forces can take part in ground surveillance when the fire risk is high.

c) Aerial Detection

Aerial detection is organised at the national level with planes equipped with fire suppression means. In addition, some departments organise their own local aerial detection.

i) National level

Aerial means dedicated to aerial detection are the following:



  • 10 Trackers S2F, carrying 3 tons retardant. They are mainly used for fire detection and first attack.

  • 11 Canadairs CL415 (able to carry 6 tons). They are used mainly for fire suppression but are occasionally used for aerial patrol and detection.

  • 2 Dash 8 Q400, carrying 10 tons retardant. Originally used for setting up retardant lines, they take part in aerial detection with trackers when fire danger is high.

Figure 9 - Canadair

Helicopters are not used for aerial detection, but only for fire suppression, because of their high cost.

Planes are located at the airport of Marignane (Bouches-du-Rhône department), in the south East of France. During the fire season, Trackers are dispatched by pairs in temporary air bases in Cannes (Alpes-Maritime), Carcasonne (Aude), Bastia (Corsica). Besides, 2 Canadairs are based in Ajaccio (Corsica).

Occasionally, other air bases may host 2 trackers: Figari (Corsica), Nimes (Gard), Hyères (Var) and Cahors (Lot).

Staff includes 21 pilots for Trackers, 40 pilots for Canadairs, 10 pilots for Dash8. 95 % of the pilots are former military staff. Pilots for trackers have been trained as firefighters. Pilots may fly a maximum of 800 hours a month, 35 hours a week and 8 hours a day. The number of hours spent on aerial fire detection varies every year.

ii) Department level

About 10 departments set up local aerial detection, in addition to the national aerial detection. They use smaller planes (such as CESSNA, Figure 10), generally without any suppression means (except in Hérault department). These planes usually belong to private companies, and are hired by the Fire Fighting Service. The crew includes a professional pilot and a fireman as an observer. Still, some departments own their own plane and the pilots themselves are fire fighters.



Figure 10 - Plane used for fire detection - CESSNA

The CODIS orders the aerial patrol, depending on fire danger level. Pilots inform the CODIS when they detect a fire, guide the fire fighting teams and support the Field Commander. They return to their surveillance mission as soon as aerial suppression means arrive on the spot.

Table 4 - Number of planes and flying hours in each department for local aerial surveillance



Region

Dpt

N of planes

Type

Activated

Fire danger level

Number of hours

Time

Languedoc-Roussillon

30

1

Surveillance plane

Not null

about 450

11h/19h

34

1

Small plane

Exceptional







48

1

Small plane

Moderate

159

From 14h

66

1

Small plane

Mandatory from Severe

Optional when Moderate



212

Maximum from 13h to 20h

Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur

05

1

Surveillance plane

All

150

2 to à 6 hours (usually during the afternoon)

84

1 to 3

Surveillance plane

From severe

300 to 500

13h/19h

Rhône
-Alpes


07

1

Small plane

All from 06/15 to 09/15

237

13h/20h

26

1

Surveillance plane

From severe

240

14h/18h
13h/19h (when very severe fire risk)

d) New technologies for fire detection

The use of new technologies for fire detection is not very wide-spread in France. Some technologies are being tested in a few departments.


  • The “Artis Fire” detection system, developed by a French company, has been tested in the departments of Var (Esterel area), Gard and in «Bouches-du-Rhône» in the area of Marseilles.
    The system detects groups of points moving homogeneously in a given area. This reveals the presence of smoke. 3 pictures per second are treated and recorded on the spot. If a smoke signal is identified, an alert is sent to the Command Post for checking. The alert mentions the camera, geographic coordinates and the associated video.
    This system was used for 4 years from 1999 in the area of Marseilles: 3 sets of 3 cameras were used, in addition with a mobile remote-controlled camera to confirm the alerts. The performances were not satisfactory. Problems are partly due to the very uneven ground in the South East of France. Too many false alerts were generated, each time the light changed because of a cloud or of the smoke from a factory. The system has been abandoned except in the Gard department. At the moment, the tourist area of «Pont du Gard» is the only area equipped with the “Artis Fire” system.

  • The “Fire Watch” system, developed by a German company, consists in a camera that makes a complete turn within 4 minutes. Every 10 degrees, it takes 3 shots (2 seconds between each shot). The pictures are treated by a programme to detect the pixels showing the presence of smoke from a forest fire. The 3 images are then compared to check if the target is moving or not. If the system considers it has detected a forest fire smoke, it gives an alert in the treatment centre and an operator checks that the alarm is justified. Detection can be performed by this type of camera up to 10 km (40 km when the weather is clear).
    The Fire Watch system has been tested in the Bouches-du-Rhône since 2004. 2 watch towers are now equipped with such a camera and alert is directly transmitted to the CODIS. For the moment, the SDIS and the German company have a cooperation agreement to test the system, to adjust it and improve its performance in the South East of France. The SDIS has not yet bought the system. Several improvements are still required before the system becomes operational.

4.1.4Operational Guidelines


General operational guidelines for ground detection

Lookout towers and mobile brigades are operated during the fire season (roughly 2 months in summer in the South of France, and 7 months in the South West of France). The exact period is defined by the local CODIS according to the fire danger rate and may vary form one year to another and from one department to another. (see Table 3 and Table 4 above).

The daily surveillance period is adjusted according to the distribution of fires during the day. It also depends on the availability of staff and financial means.

General operational guidelines for aerial detection

Aerial detection is activated by the Zonal Operational Coordination Centre (Centre Opérationnel de Zone – COZ), in accordance with the Departmental Operational Fire Centre (Centre Opérationnel Départemental d’Incendie et de Secours – CODIS). It is activated when the fire danger level is very severe or exceptional. When fire danger is severe, pilots are on alert.

Planes operate by pairs. One aerial detection mission for one plane lasts 2 and a half hours and one pilot performs 3 missions a day. One team flies back to the base only when the next team is on the spot.

The COZ defines the guidelines for the aerial patrol. Pilots define their route in order to be able to fly to any place within their surveillance area (defined by the COZ) within 10 minutes maximum. One of the two pilots is the head of the patrol and is responsible for decision making if fire suppression is required.

Their main duty remains detection and if they detect a fire, their goal is to alert ground means and go back to their detection mission as soon as possible. When detecting a fire, the pilot informs directly the CODIS and, if necessary, requires the authorisation of dropping. He is allowed to drop only once the safety of ground means is guaranteed. Dropping is not systematic, since while the plane refills, no aerial detection is performed. The CODIS also sends an alert message to the COZ. If fire-fighting planes are sent on the fire spot, the aerial detection planes return to their detection mission after refilling, as other plane arrive on the spot.

Specific guidelines

When the fire risk is exceptional, specific guidelines must be applied.

i) the “ALARME” plan (Alerte Liée Aux Dangers Météorologiques Exceptionnels) plans a reinforcement of fire detection and of transmission. Additional patrols are sent on the field. This plan is activated by the CODIS and set up by the head of the administration in the department (Préfet).

ii) The “ALADIN” plan (Alerte Liée Aux Départs d’Incendies de Nuit) consists of a set of measures to extend the fire detection device (lookout towers and mobile brigades) after sunset when meteorological conditions justify it (strong wind remaining or increasing during the night). It is set up like the ALARME plan. It may last until dawn or be interrupted during the night. Local volunteers brigade may also be asked to intensify their actions in their sector.

iii) The “HEPHAISTOS” plan manages the use of the armed forces from the marine, consisting of units of 15 persons in charge with surveillance and watching burnt areas to avoid reignition. These units are called Adapted Surveillance Modules (Modules Adaptés de Surveillance-MAS). A firefighter must always go with them but the staff remains under the authority of the military head of the MAS. MAS are used in the Provence area only, covering the departments of Bouches-du-Rhône, Var Alpes-Maritimes, Hautes-Alpes, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, Vaucluse, Drome and Ardèche.



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