Wildfires are one of nature’s greatest double-edged swords. Every year, people lose their homes and even their lives to wildfires. Wildfires fill the air with smoke and make outdoor recreation all but impossible in some areas. They destroy native plants, natural resources, and trails. Views change permanently. Wildfire damage and burn scars can close recreation areas, sometimes for years.
And, at the same time, they are an essential part of the natural ecosystem. Wildfires clear the forests of dead vegetation, enrich the soil with wood ash, kill pests like bark beetles, and generally hit the natural “refresh” button for wildernesses.
But wildfires are getting worse in the West and across the U.S., according to a new report from the Outdoor Alliance (OA). It’s a fact that’s having a disproportionate effect on outdoor recreation. OA reports that in the past 5 years, 1,029 recreation sites in National Forests have been damaged by wildfires — costing the forest service (read: taxpayers) over $126 million to repair.
Why are wildfires getting so much worse? And what can the average outdoor enthusiast do to help? Those are exactly the questions that the Wildfire and Outdoor Recreation in the West report aims to answer.
The Wildfire and Outdoor Recreation Report

OA’s Wildfire and Outdoor Recreation in the West Report is a 30-page paper disentangling the policy discussion around wildfires. It describes in no uncertain terms how this issue is getting worse — and quickly.
“Over the past several decades, wildfires throughout the Western U.S. (and much of the globe) have become larger, more severe, costlier, and more destructive,” the report reads. “And these trends are projected to continue as the climate warms.”
Outdoor Alliance doesn’t blame all of that solely on climate change, though. It acknowledges that the issue is far more complicated than that. The report outlines five different variables at play that are fueling these fires.
What’s Making Our Wildfires Worse?
Climate change is the first and most obvious culprit here — so it gets the top spot. Across the West, it’s making droughts more severe, temperatures hotter, winds more extreme, and precipitation patterns skewed — all of which are contributing to a state of increased vulnerability to wildfire. But climate change isn’t acting alone.
Increased development in fire-prone areas also plays a big role, according to the report. Building in wildland-urban interface areas dramatically increases the potential for destruction as homes and neighborhoods pop up in fire-prone areas.
Then, there’s commercial logging. It not only clears forests of their oldest (most fire-resistant) trees but also employs reforestation techniques that homogenize the forests, replacing old trees with dense plantations of younger, less-resistant trees for future harvest.
Historical fire suppression also contributes to the problem. Since the early 1900s, firefighters made it a mission to put out every wildfire they could — no matter if it presented a danger to humans or not. Total fire suppression like that creates a buildup of forest fuels, which, when finally ignited, burns much more densely and hotter. That makes these fires far harder to extinguish.
Finally, the report notes that the removal of indigenous fire stewardship has played a role as well. Native tribes often burned forests for a number of ecological purposes. But when Europeans arrived, those practices quickly started tapering off. And as a result, the landscape of the forests changed.
Wildfire Impacts on Outdoor Recreation

What Can Be Done?

What Can You Do?
