S3|EP5: The New Normal
Narration: LK Ward
Transcript:
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I think the choice to study fire,
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generally, is a bit of an occupational hazard. It’s true
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we’re not necessarily looking at the verdant, green parts of our planet.
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We’re headed to the end of the road. We’re looking at areas
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of rainforest that have been cleared and burned. We’re capturing
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scorched landscapes.
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[intro music]
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NASA EXPLORERS
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Episode FiveThe New Normal
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FIRES
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In this series, we’ve been following the fire season
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around the world. First, in the American West,
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in the early part of summer — the start of the fire season.
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Then in high northern latitudes — Canada and Alaska.
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Then finally, in the Philippines, as the summer became
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fall. In the past, you could count on the fire
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season eventually coming to an end, but we’re now learning that that's
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not really the case anymore.
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What we’re seeing is that areas that have been flammable are becoming more flammable, pushing those systems
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into either extreme conditions, or a year-round fire
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season, where fires are literally possible at any time.
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We caught up with Dr. Doug Morton to find out the extent of the damage.
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Hotter and drier conditions, adding wind,
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you end up with fires that are moving faster, burning hotter than what we’ve seen before.
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Can we better understand, anticipate and characterize
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the changes in our planet that come from those extreme fires?
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Actually, yes, we can.
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Myself and my staff at the GIS center worked closely with colleagues at Goddard
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Space Flight Center to make this thing happen.
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This is Keith Weber, the wildfire rehabilitation expert that pioneered
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a new groundbreaking tool — the Rehabilitation Capability
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Convergence for Ecosystem Recovery includes a function that allows
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fire responders to triangulate their wildfire response.
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The tool can geolocate everything from burned areas to
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potential landslides to impacts on endangered species.
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But RECOVER really gained momentum after one fire in particular.
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I remember looking at our whiteboard that showed
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all the real high-priority things we
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need to be doing and that whiteboard was clear.
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And as I was walking out, I talked to some of my students and I said, “I think
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the wildfire year is done. We got it wrapped up.”
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Well, shouldn’t have said that. Because the next day
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one of our users in California,
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Woolsey Fire started going. It became much larger,
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I think, they thought it would, because of those big winds. And it
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you know, really grew very rapidly.
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Well, at that point, we were working with that team on a daily basis
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doing refreshes, as we call it, as the fire grew and grew and grew
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everyday until we had that thing out.
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Keith’s team is making a tangible difference by saving property, resources and lives.
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Innovations like these represent a promising future.
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As we move from today’s cutting edge
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science into tomorrow’s prediction, response and understanding,
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the work we do today opens up an opportunity to do that
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so much better going forward.
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There’s so many science topics that today are on the cutting edge of our understanding
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and what get me and my science colleagues motivated to go out into the field and keep working
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on these problems. Can we improve the way that we can
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forecast, for example, fire risk? Not just for tomorrow, but
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for ten days for now. It might help managers,
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communities prepare and respond to changing fire weather conditions.
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Like all of us, our NASA Explorers and partners
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in exploration face the daily decision to either choose apathy
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or get to work. The future is uncertain
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but we choose to meet the challenges of this new normal head on.
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FIRES
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Executive Producers
Lauren Ward
Patrick Lynch
Series Producers
Lauren Ward
Katy Mersmann
Matt Radcliff
Social Media Producers
Katy Mersmann
Brittany Brown
Sarah Loff
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Videographers
Katy Mersmann
Lauren Ward
Jim Round
John Caldwell
Rob Andreoli
Rafael Luis Méndez Peña
Animators
Dave Glantz
Walt Feimer
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Explorers in Order of Appearance
Doug Morton
Ambre Soja
Bruce Anderson
Kevin Schaeffer
Hal Maring
Gemma Narisma
Keith Weber
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Special Thanks to:
Peter Griffith
Elizabeth Hoy
Emily Schaller
Kate Squires
Maria-Jose Vinas
Katie Jepson
Ellen Gray
Ryan Fitzgibbons
Cindy Gilday
Laura Bourgeaeu-Chavez
Michaela Battaglia and Team
Charles Miller
Bruce Hanna
David Currie
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NASA EXPLORERS