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Coordination and cooperation in wildland fire management.

Current National Statistics
4 Total
New Large Fires
4 Incidents
Large Fires Being Suppressed
68,558 Acres
Burned in Large Fires
Last Updated:

* Source for statistics is the Incident Management Situation Report published by the National Interagency Coordination Center

NIFC Facebook

#NationalFireNews: January 31, 2025. Wildland firefighters contained the Hughes and Border 2 fires in Southern California. The Palisades fire is now 98% contained. Large fire activity picked up in the Southern Area where four new ... large wildfires were reported, two in North Carolina one in Oklahoma, and one in Virginia. So far in #FireYear2025, 2,128 wildfires have burned 64,038 acres. This is the most acres burned in January in the past 10 years. Weather, topography, and fuels (a term which mostly refers to vegetation, but includes anything that can burn) are the three environmental factors that influence wildfires the most. Of these three factors, fuels are the only one that people can influence through management. When fuels are reduced or broken up on forests and rangelands, wildfires tend to burn with less intensity and lower spread potential. By managing the fuels around your home, you create defensible space. Community fuels reduction projects protect homes, watersheds, and local economies. Learn more about how to make your home and community Firewise ➡ https://www.nfpa.org/education-and-research/wildfire/firewise-usa#preparing-homes-for-wildfire 🔥More NFN: https://www.nifc.gov/fire-information/nfn
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What happens after a wildfire? Take a look at suppression repair efforts after the #Border2Fire in California. ⬇️
Take a moment to review the effects of smoke exposure from the National Wildfire Coordinating Group and find some safety resources linked below. Smoke is part of the wildland fire environment. Now more than ever, firefighters and ... incident overhead should be on the lookout for opportunities to reduce exposure. Incident overhead can think strategically about assigning wildland firefighting tasks in certain work environments. 🚨https://www.nwcg.gov/6mfs/firefighter-health-first-aid/effects-of-smoke-exposure Resources ⬇️⬇️⬇️ 👉NWCG Smoke Management Guide for Prescribed Fires: https://fs-prod-nwcg.s3.us-gov-west-1.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/publication/pms420-3.pdf?VersionId=ASrtgkjznnD7Kz86usVcojvbgj7KTp2b 👉Smoke: Knowing the Risks: https://www.nwcg.gov/training-courses/rt-130/hazards/haz508 👉Protecting Wildfire Personnel from Smoke - How IMTs Address Smoke Risks: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-rYuFIvZmrc #FFCancerMonth 📸Photo by Annalee Graves, USFWS
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'Tis the season for fuels reduction! Make sure to follow your local federal or state Facebook pages to stay in the know about what's happening near you.
#NationalFireNews: The National #PreparednessLevel has decreased to a 1 (PL1) as of 0730 (MST), today January 29, 2025. This is due to mitigating fire weather conditions across Southern California and an increase in availability ... of all national resource types. 🔥More on preparedness levels: https://www.nifc.gov/fire-information 📸 Laguna Hotshots on the Eaton Fire (January 10, 2025)
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It's National Plan for a Vacation Day! We hope that you have the great outdoors on your destination list, all we ask is that you practice recreating responsibly to help prevent a human-caused fire. Check to ensure your chains are ... properly secure, always extinguish your campfires, practice fire-safe target shooting, and enjoy your time! Did you know over 4,660,000 acres burned due to human-caused fires in fire year 2024? With your help, we can reduce that number in #FireYear2025. 👉 https://www.nifc.gov/fire-information/fire-prevention-education-mitigation/wildfire-prevention 👉https://smokeybear.com/ 📸#TheLandWeProtect, photo at Crater Lake National Park by Jonathon Bell, BLM.
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The 2024 Wildland Fire Summary and Statistics Annual Report has been released! 🔥 The National Interagency Coordination Center compiled the 54-page document full of statistics that overviews national wildfire activity, national ... preparedness levels, requests processed through the NICC, and other key topics. Nationally, there were 64,897 wildfires that burned 8,924,884 acres in #FireYear2024. Curious what the largest wildfire of 2024 was? The Smokehouse Creek Fire in Texas and Oklahoma burned 1,054,153 acres. Find the full annual report and other large wildfires in 2024 here👉 https://www.nifc.gov/sites/default/files/NICC/2-Predictive%20Services/Intelligence/Annual%20Reports/2024/annual_report_2025.pdf 📸Fish Creek Fire, Wyoming
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#NationalFireNews: January 28, 2025. There are currently 3 large fires burning nationwide, all in Southern California. About 3,500 wildland firefighters and support personnel are assigned to these incidents. Please find the ... #HughesFire on InciWeb, and the #PalisadesFire and #Border2Fire on the CAL FIRE website. Current information is available about these fires, including resources for those seeking or offering support after the devastating losses that have occurred there. Eight MAFFS C-130 airtankers and support personnel have been deployed to support wildland fire operations in Southern California. Canadian resources supporting these efforts include two airtankers from Quebec, two crews and two overhead personnel from Alberta, and one overhead personnel from British Columbia. 🔥More NFN: https://www.nifc.gov/fire-information/nfn 📸CALFIRE Flickr
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Welcome to the Nation's Logistical Support Center

Support Center

The United States federal wildland fire community is a vast network of dedicated public servants, made up of the combined wildland fire workforces of the Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and Bureau of Indian Affairs, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service. Together, these agencies manage wildland fire on nearly 700 million acres of federal public land, approximately one-fifth of the total land area in the United States. 

NIFC is home to the national wildland fire management programs of these federal agencies, in addition to partners including the National Association of State Foresters, the U.S. Fire Administration, the National Weather Service, and the Department of Defense. These entities work together to provide leadership, policy oversight, and coordination to the nation’s wildland fire programs.

In recent years, the shared mission at NIFC has grown to include all types of fire management, including hazardous fuels treatments, integrated fire and land-use planning, and more. Fire management under this larger and more diverse umbrella aims not only to achieve fire suppression goals, but to accomplish a broad spectrum of natural resource objectives in an efficient, cost-effective manner.

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