https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...-raking/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.f42976f05608
Apparently, while Trump was in France, the subject came up and was discussed with the Finnish president, although Trump said that it was due to Finland raking and cleaning the forest floor:
However, the Finnish president said that it was not due to raking, however they do have controlled burns:
The article also mentions that Finland has compartmentalized its forests to prevent fires from spreading beyond a single compartment. Although that may not work for California.
Months before devastating wildfires caused havoc in California, firefighters from across Europe headed to Sweden as authorities there struggled to extinguish several massive blazes. Sweden is one of the continent’s greenest countries, and officials there eventually got so desperate that they ordered an air force jet to drop a bomb in the middle of the wildfire’s center to deprive the blaze of oxygen.
The strategy failed, and Sweden’s fires continued to rage for weeks. But just a few hundred miles away, in neighboring Finland, officials worried about a far different problem: not enough wildfires. “From nature’s point of view, the diversity of species and habitats suffers from too few fires,” the Finnish Forest Association recently concluded in a report.
In Sweden, officials were stymied by their neighbor’s luck: Weather maps showed that both countries were adversely affected by the same rare, extreme heat this summer.
Apparently, while Trump was in France, the subject came up and was discussed with the Finnish president, although Trump said that it was due to Finland raking and cleaning the forest floor:
Over the weekend, Finnish President Sauli Niinisto was forced to clarify that this strategy does not consist of raking, however. He was contradicting his U.S. counterpart, President Trump, who said Saturday as he was touring California’s wildfire areas that Finnish authorities “spent a lot of time on raking and cleaning and doing things, and they don’t have any problem.”
“You’ve got to take care of the floors. You know the floors of the forests, it’s very important,” Trump said.
However, the Finnish president said that it was not due to raking, however they do have controlled burns:
The Finnish president confirmed that he discussed wildfire prevention with Trump, but rejected the suggestion that raking ever came up. The forest service in Finland does carry out controlled burns of the forest floor mostly to clear away underbrush and also promote new saplings.
Researchers aren’t sure whether the country’s approach can really hold any lessons for California, however, given that parts of Finland are located close to the Arctic Circle and have prolonged periods of rain and snow. Whereas below-average precipitation is still the exception in Finland, it has become the new normal in California.
Researchers say that Finland has a far denser road network than other nations in the region, which create barriers to the expansion of the blazes. Lakes and rivers are abundant, too. With many of the California fires happening near population centers now, a lack of roads is probably not the issue.
Perhaps the most striking difference with California is of historical nature: Northern Europe is greener today than 100 years ago, whereas California has lost about half of its big trees. Europe’s medieval and industrial revolution-era need for wood turned former forest areas into grasslands, especially in southern Finland.
The article also mentions that Finland has compartmentalized its forests to prevent fires from spreading beyond a single compartment. Although that may not work for California.
When reforestation became a more serious concern, Finland split future forests up into small compartments. One side effect of this were fewer wildfires, as blazes usually don’t spread beyond a single compartment, with borders that are usually marked by wide paths or by trees with different heights.
While that approach may work in other European countries with similar histories, climate change California with its steadily heating up forests are facing a challenge that it can’t confront itself.