A Review of Approaches to Monitoring Smoke from Vegetation Fires for Public Health
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Monitoring the level of pollution generated
by both planned and unplanned vegetation
fires is a fundamental requirement for
assessing human health impacts, informing
public health actions, and ensuring that
regulatory requirements are met. The
issue is of growing importance because of
the increasing use of i®prescribed burningi¯
¨C the planned setting of fires under mild
weather conditions to reduce fuel loads
and therefore lower fire intensities from
unplanned vegetation fires. This practice
often causes the pooling of smoke in
airsheds and thus conflicts with air quality
statutes. In this paper, we review biomass
smoke monitoring practices in Australia
and North America. In North America, air
quality has enormous influence over planned
burning and consequently there has been
considerable investment and development
in the monitoring of smoke emissions
from fires. In Australia, the monitoring of
particulate pollution has been focused on
urban and industrial areas. Samplers used
for this purpose may not be appropriate
for measuring smoke from bushfires due
to long averaging times and non-real-time
data reporting. Drawing on North American
approaches we suggest that Australian
populations in fire prone areas would
benefit from improved management of
smoke pollution from both planned and
unplanned fires by increased use of (a) simple
local guidelines based on the visibility of
landmarks, (b) portable and mobile samplers
with real-time reporting of pollution levels via
the internet, and (c) dissemination of smoke
forecasts using predictive smoke dispersal
modelling. Benefits of more temporally
and spatially accurate data include (a) more
appropriate tools and greater capacity to
support public health responses to pollution
episodes, (b) improved monitoring of
planned burns, and (c) better validation of
predictive dispersion models. Ultimately this
will provide an appropriate knowledge-base
for the development of prescribed burning
policies, guidelines and practices for the
overall benefit of public health.