Executive Summary
Wildfires are intensifying in frequency, severity, and economic impact across the globe, but especially within the United States. From densely populated regions of California to the vulnerable leeward coastlines of Hawaii, recent megafires highlight the convergence of poor planning, climate volatility, and aging infrastructure. This report outlines wildfire trends from the past decade (2015-2025), presents data tables for major U.S. and international fire events, and applies a risk assessment model (HARC – Hazard Analysis / Risk Control) commonly used in the energy industry to inform urban planning and building resilience.
1. Wildfire Trends: U.S. and Global Overview
United States:
- Between 2014 and 2023, the U.S. averaged 62,277 wildfires per year, consuming ~7.02 million acres annually.
- Suppression costs alone average $2–3 billion per year, while total damages from fires can exceed $20–50 billion annually.
- Over 129,000 structures have been lost to wildfires since 2005.
- Approximately 85% of wildfires are human-caused.
Informational Note: For visualization purposes, 100 acres is approximately equivalent to 75 football fields or 0.4 square kilometers.
Global Landscape:
- Though overall burned area varies year-to-year, extreme wildfires have doubled in frequency and intensity over the past two decades.
- Notable international events include Australia’s Black Summer (2019–20), Canadian wildfires (2023), and increasing Amazon forest burns.
2. U.S. Wildfire Data Table (2014–2025, Selected Events)
| Name/Season | Date | Location | Cause | Area Burned | Structures Lost | People Affected (Evacuated) | Deaths | Cost (USD) |
| King Fire | Sep–Oct 2014 | El Dorado County, California | Arson | 97,717 acres | 80+ | ~2,830 | 0 | $117M suppression |
| Soberanes Fire | Jul–Oct 2016 | Monterey County, California | Illegal campfire | 132,127 acres | 68 | Multiple | 0 | $260M suppression |
| Thomas Fire | Dec 2017 | Ventura & Santa Barbara Counties, California | Power lines | 281,893 acres | 1,063 | 100,000+ | 0 | $2.2B damages |
| Camp Fire | Nov 2018 | Butte County, California | Power line | 153,336 acres | 18,804 | 52,000 | 85 | $16.5B damages |
| California Wildfires | Oct 2019 | Northern & Southern California | Various | 277,285 acres | 703 | N/A | 3 | $163M |
| 2020 CA Fire Season | Feb–Jan 2020 | Statewide, California | Lightning, Accidents | 4.3M acres | ~10,000 | N/A | 33 | $12B+ |
| Colorado Fire Season | 2020 | Multiple counties, Colorado | Lightning, Human | 665,454 acres | 469 | Thousands | 0 | $266M suppression |
| Dixie Fire | Jul–Oct 2021 | Butte, Plumas, Lassen Counties, California | Powerline | 963,000 acres | 1,329 | >9,500 | 1 | $1.15B + $637M suppression |
| Marshall Fire | Dec 2021 | Boulder County, Colorado | Undetermined | 6,026 acres | 1,084 | 37,500 | 2 | $2B+ |
| Windy Fire | Sep–Nov 2021 | Tulare County, California | Lightning | 97,528 acres | 128 | ~200 | 0 | $78.4M suppression |
| Mosquito Fire | Sep 2022 | Placer & El Dorado Counties, California | Undetermined | 76,788 acres | 78 | >11,000 | 0 | $181M |
| Lahaina Fire | Aug 2023 | Lahaina, Maui, Hawaii | Utility + Wind + Drought | 2,170 acres | 2,200 | 11,000+ | 101 | $5.5–6B |
| Palisades Fire | Jan 2025 | Los Angeles County, California | Santa Ana winds | 23,448 acres | 6,837 | N/A | 12 | $25B |
| Eaton Fire | Jan 2025 | Los Angeles County, California | Possibly power-line | 14,021 acres | 9,418 | 100,000+ | 18 | $27.5B |
| SoCal January Wildfires | Jan 2025 | LA, SD, Riverside, Orange, SB Counties, California | Santa Ana winds | 57,636 acres | ~18,189 | 200,000+ | 30 | $50B (total); $20B insured |
| Wolf Fire | Jun 2025 (ongoing) | Ventura County, California | Dry brush, high winds | 1,100+ acres | Minimal | Evacuations ordered | 0 | TBD |
3. Global Wildfire Data Table (2019-2024, Selected Events)
| Name/Season | Date | Location | Cause | Area Burned | Structures Lost | People Affected (Evacuated) | Deaths | Cost (USD) |
| Black Summer Fires | Jun 2019–Mar 2020 | New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, Australia | Lightning, Arson | 18.6M hectares | 6,500+ | Tens of thousands | 34 | $4.4B+ |
| Amazon/Cerrado Fires | 2023 | Brazil (Amazon, Cerrado, Pantanal regions) | Slash-and-burn, drought | 34.5M hectares | Not reported | Regional evacuations | Unknown | Not specified |
| Canadian Boreal Fires | 2023 | Alberta, British Columbia, Quebec, Canada | Lightning, heat, wind | >17M hectares | Hundreds+ (est.) | Tens of thousands | Unknown | $8B+ |
| Greek Wildfires | Jul–Aug 2023 | Attica, Rhodes, Evros, Greece | Arson, heat wave | >150,000 hectares | Hundreds+ | 20,000+ (Rhodes alone) | 28 | Not specified |
| Chile Wildfires | Feb 2023 | Ñuble, Biobío, Araucanía, Chile | Heat, dry winds, human | 440,000 hectares | 1,600+ homes | Thousands | 24 | $2B+ est. |
| Siberian Wildfires | 2021–2022 | Yakutia (Sakha Republic), Russia | Lightning, climate-induced | >18M hectares | Unknown | Widespread displacement | Unknown | Not disclosed |
| Global Emissions Fires | 2023–2024 | Worldwide (Canada, Amazon, Greece, SE Asia) | Climate extremes | ~3.9M km² (total) | — | Global air quality impacts | N/A | 8.6B tons CO₂ |
4. Case Study: Lahaina Fire, Maui (2023)
- Date: August 8–9, 2023
- Area Burned: ~2,170 acres
- Structures Lost: ~2,200
- Fatalities: 101
- Cause: Likely utility line ignition + hurricane-induced winds + drought
- Economic Loss: Estimated at $5.5–6B
Key Failures:
- No activation of emergency sirens
- Delayed water access for fire suppression
- Evacuation bottlenecks due to poor urban layout
The Lahaina fire illustrates how even a relatively small fire in terms of acreage can become one of the deadliest in U.S. history when it strikes a densely populated, poorly prepared coastal town. High winds from a distant hurricane and overgrown invasive grasses exacerbated the fire’s spread. The incident has prompted renewed scrutiny of Hawaiian Electric’s grid vulnerability, emergency communication systems, and urban development policies.
This fire serves as a stark reminder that wildfire preparedness must include not just forest management, but also urban design, communication redundancy, and utility hardening – especially in subtropical or coastal areas previously considered low-risk.

Satellite Image: Lahaina, Maui in 2025 – Clearing Properties and Beginning Infrastructure Renewal (Image Courtesy of Google Earth and Airbus)
5. Why the U.S. Faces More Extreme Wildfires
The United States (particularly the western and coastal states) experiences more frequent and more destructive wildfires than most other developed countries. This is due to a combination of ecological, climatic, infrastructural, and social factors:
Ecological Fuel Loads
- Western U.S. vegetation includes flammable species such as chaparral, pine, fir, and invasive grasses like cheatgrass.
- Forests are overstocked due to a century of fire suppression, increasing fuel for crown fires.
- Brush encroachment into residential areas provides a ladder for flames to reach homes.
Informational Note: A crown fire is a type of wildfire that spreads by moving through the canopy or tops of trees, rather than just burning along the ground. These fires are particularly dangerous because:
- They spread rapidly, especially in dense forests with connected canopies.
- They often produce intense heat, flame lengths exceeding 100 feet, and large ember storms.
- They are difficult to control due to their height, speed, and potential to leap over firebreaks or roads.
Crown fires usually begin as surface fires that climb into the treetops via “ladder fuels” like shrubs, small trees, or low branches. Once in the canopy, they can cover vast areas very quickly and are responsible for some of the most destructive wildfire events globally.
Climate Pressure and Megadrought
- The western U.S. is currently experiencing the worst drought in 1,200 years, reducing fuel moisture and increasing fire probability.
- Snowmelt occurs earlier and rainfall later, lengthening fire seasons by 70+ days since the 1970s.
- High winds and dry lightning from monsoons and tropical disturbances (like Hurricane Dora near Hawaii) further increase risk.
Infrastructure Ignitions
- Overhead power lines are frequent ignition points. PG&E’s (Pacific Gas and Electric Company of California) equipment alone has caused dozens of fires including the 2018 Camp Fire and 2021 Dixie Fire.
- Lack of smart shutoff protocols or underground cabling in dry, wind-prone areas makes the grid a major hazard.
Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI)
- Over 49 million homes in the U.S. are now located in WUI zones.
- Many of these homes use flammable materials (cedar shingles, exposed decks) and lack proper defensible space or landscaping buffers.
- Urban encroachment continues to put more lives and property at risk.
Policy and Management Gaps
- Prescribed burns, used effectively by Indigenous peoples and in other countries (e.g., Australia), are underutilized.
- Local zoning laws often prioritize development over hazard avoidance.
- Emergency planning is uneven, with critical failures in early warning, water access, and evacuation seen in Lahaina.
Together, these conditions make U.S. wildfires not only more likely but more lethal and more expensive. They also suggest that risk is not merely environmental, but institutional and cultural directly shaped by how and where we choose to live, build, and govern.
6. Supplement: HARC Matrix: Wildfire Urban Planning Hazards
This adapted HARC (Hazard Analysis and Risk Control) framework identifies hazardous conditions tied to wildfire risk, estimates initial risk, and introduces control measures to reduce risk to operable levels. Residual risk is recalculated post-controls.
Risk Ranking Formula: Likelihood (1 through 5) x Severity (1 through 5) = Risk Level (Max or Highest value: 25)
| Subject | Hazard Description & Worst Case | Population/Assets Affected | Likelihood | Severity | Initial Risk | Controls (Prevent/Mitigate) | Likelihood | Severity | Residual Risk |
| Building in WUI | Urban ignition from ember storm; multi-home loss | Homes, families, infrastructure | 4 | 5 | 20 | Zoning laws, fire-resistant materials, defensible space | 2 | 3 | 6 |
| Invasive Grasses | Flash fire ignition and rapid spread | Vegetation, structures | 5 | 4 | 20 | Prescribed burns, grazing, invasive removal | 2 | 3 | 6 |
| Overhead Power Lines | Power arc ignition in windstorms | Grid, community | 4 | 5 | 20 | Undergrounding, shutoff switches, inspection | 2 | 3 | 6 |
| Lack of Evac Routes | Trapped civilians, loss of life | Population | 3 | 5 | 15 | Route planning, signage, drills | 2 | 2 | 4 |
| Flammable Building Materials | Structure ignition from embers | Residential assets | 4 | 4 | 16 | Class A roofs/siding, ember guards | 2 | 2 | 4 |
| Drought-Stressed Trees | Crown fire into homes | Trees, homes | 5 | 4 | 20 | Tree removal, pruning, buffer zones | 2 | 3 | 6 |
From this HARC it can be inferred that with improved engineering controls, local or state government funded infrastructure improvements, and a revisit to ancestral prescribed burning campaigns a lot of the associated “initial risks” can be significantly reduced, if not nearly eliminated.
7. Recommendations
To mitigate the escalating threat of wildfires, particularly those affecting the wildland-urban interface (WUI), a multi-layered approach is necessary. Drawing from global best practices, energy sector safety models, and post-incident reviews, the following recommendations are proposed:
1. Urban Planning Overhaul
- Restrict development in high-risk fire zones through stricter zoning regulations.
- Mandate fire-adapted community planning: clear evacuation routes, fire breaks, buffer zones.
- Require environmental impact assessments that include fire risk modeling before permits are approved.
2. Grid Modernization
- Underground utility lines in fire-prone areas or use high-wind smart shutoff systems (e.g., Public Safety Power Shutoffs).
- Increase vegetation clearance around transmission corridors.
- Integrate grid sensors and AI-based risk mapping to forecast failure hotspots.
3. Vegetation and Land Management
- Expand prescribed burn programs with Indigenous consultation.
- Invest in grazing, thinning, and mechanical fuel removal.
- Introduce invasive species eradication and native vegetation restoration programs.
4. Resilient Construction Standards
- Mandate Class A fire-rated materials for roofing, siding, windows, and decks.
- Require ember-resistant vents, non-combustible fencing, and hardened landscaping.
- Retrofit existing structures in high-risk zones with defensible space requirements.
5. Public Readiness and Evacuation Planning
- Fund community outreach, school-based programs, and multilingual preparedness campaigns.
- Install redundant emergency alert systems (sirens, push notifications, radio overrides).
- Run annual evacuation drills in high-risk neighborhoods.
6. Climate Adaptation and Federal Coordination
- Integrate fire resilience into climate adaptation plans at the federal, state, and municipal level.
- Expand FEMA’s pre-disaster mitigation grants and tie funding to proactive fire safety measures.
- Develop national wildfire risk maps updated annually using satellite and AI data fusion.
7. Post-Incident Audits and Accountability
- Mandate third-party forensic investigations into utility-related fires.
- Enforce strict liability for negligence, with funds directed to community rebuilding and grid hardening.
- Create public dashboards for wildfire preparedness metrics by county or utility.
References
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U.S. Forest Service Wildfire Statistics
https://www.nifc.gov/fire-information/statistics/wildfires -
NOAA U.S. Billion-Dollar Disasters
https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/billions/ -
FEMA Wildfire Mitigation Planning
https://www.fema.gov/emergency-managers/risk-management/hazards/wildfire -
CISA Wildfire Infrastructure Risks
https://www.cisa.gov/topics/critical-infrastructure-security-and-resilience/extreme-weather/wildfires -
Blue Forest / UC Berkeley Wildfire Cost Estimation
https://www.blueforest.org/blog/the-true-cost-of-wildfire -
Headwaters Economics – Structures Destroyed by Wildfire
https://headwaterseconomics.org/natural-hazards/structures-destroyed-by-wildfire/ -
Our World in Data – Global Wildfires
https://ourworldindata.org/wildfires -
Wikipedia – Major Wildfires and Events
- 2019–20 Australian bushfires: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019–20_Australian_bushfire_season
- Dixie Fire (2021): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dixie_Fire
- Lahaina Fire: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_Hawaii_wildfires
-
The Guardian – Extreme Wildfire Trends
https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/jun/24/climate-crisis-driving-exponential-rise-in-most-extreme-wildfires -
Insurance Information Institute (III.org) – Wildfire Facts
https://www.iii.org/fact-statistic/facts-statistics-wildfires -
Le Monde – Fire Emissions 2023–24
https://www.lemonde.fr/en/environment/article/2024/08/15/gigantic-fires-in-canada-the-amazon-and-greece-have-been-amplified-by-global-warming_6715675_114.html
Informational Note: What Is the Wildland–Urban Interface (WUI)?
The Wildland–Urban Interface (WUI) refers to areas where human-built environments, such as homes, neighborhoods, and infrastructure, directly border or intermix with undeveloped wildland vegetation. These zones are particularly vulnerable to wildfires due to the close proximity of flammable landscapes and human activity.
WUI areas are categorized into two types:
- Intermix WUI: Vegetation is interspersed with homes and buildings.
- Interface WUI: A clear boundary exists between dense development and wildland vegetation.
Key challenges in WUI zones include:
- Increased ignition risk from human activities (vehicles, power lines, debris burning)
- Difficult firefighting logistics due to mixed terrain and access issues
- High exposure of property and lives to rapidly spreading fires
Over 49 million homes in the U.S. are now located in WUI zones, and this number continues to grow due to suburban expansion. These areas require tailored fire mitigation strategies, including defensible space regulations, fire-resistant building codes, and smart zoning laws.
Insights and Report by: Pivot Global Solutions

