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OSU receives grant for collaborative wildfire resilience research

An arial view of fire damage in the city of Detroit, Oregon, and the Oregon Cascades. A new research collaboration with OSU, UO, UW and universities from Australia and the UK aims to make communities more resilient against wildfires. <br/>
courtesy Oregon State University.
An arial view of fire damage in the city of Detroit, Oregon, and the Oregon Cascades. A new research collaboration with OSU, UO, UW and universities from Australia and the UK aims to make communities more resilient against wildfires.

Researchers hope to train students to research wildfires, and help communities plan to be more resilient.

Oregon State University researchers have received $750,000 in grants to study wildfire resilience.

The funds, from the US Forest Service and the National Science Foundation, will create a new doctoral program and research center.

Erica Fischer of OSU’s College of Engineering will serve as principal investigator on the grant.

She said a team of researchers and a doctoral student will use forestry and civil engineering to understand how wildfire interacts with the built environment, and how to prepare for it.

“How do we train the next generation of scientists to be able to study this,” she said. “How do we train the next generation of professionals to be able to work in communities and address this really big problem?”

She said the student will be embedded in Ashland, a community impacted by the 2020 Almeda wildfire.

Fischer said the research could also improve preparedness, identifying key points where fire trucks should be stationed, what homes and infrastructure are most at risk, and modeling evacuation routes and economic recovery.

“You get a real life example of what could happen,” she said.

Researchers from University of Oregon, University of Washington, the UK and Australia, will also collaborate on the project.

Fischer said an international perspective is important to understanding societal implications as well as how different communities approach risk.

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Rebecca Hansen-White