HSC Geography · Human–Environment Interactions

14.2 Bushfire Mitigation Strategies

Chapter 14 · Contemporary Hazard · NESA Stage 6 (2022) · Revision deck
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this resource may contain names, images or references to people who have died.
By the end you can…

Learning goals

Section 1

Why mitigate?

Target the fuel

We can't change weather or terrain — so mitigation manages the one control we can: fuel load (its mass, structure & arrangement) — plus preparing people & property.

Mitigation reduces risk & severity — it doesn't remove the hazard.

Section 2

Hazard-reduction toolkit

Four methods, all with trade-offs

Prescribed burning

+ cuts fuel
– must repeat; smoke; weather-limited

Mechanical clearing

+ firebreaks & access
– steep terrain; habitat

Thinning / logging

+ lower impact
– little effect on extreme fire

Chemical control

+ suppresses regrowth
– health/environment

All work best on low-intensity fires — not in catastrophic conditions.

Section 3

Cultural burning

First Nations land management

Cool, fine-grained, seasonal burning to care for Country

Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander cultural burning reads the land, protects fire-sensitive species and keeps fuel low — increasingly recognised alongside contemporary methods. Living knowledge, held by communities. Learn from AIATSIS · NITV.

Section 4

Fire danger ratings

Australian Fire Danger Rating System

Moderate
Plan & prepare
High
Be ready to act
Extreme
Act now to protect
Catastrophic
For survival, leave early

At Catastrophic, homes are not designed to survive — leaving early is the only safe option.

Section 5

Protecting homes

Defensible space

Clear fuel

Gutters, leaves, short grass, trimmed trees.

Prepare

Non-electric sprinklers, water supply.

Plan

A written bushfire survival plan.

Improves the odds — but not a guarantee in catastrophic conditions.

Section 6

Warnings & technology

Data into action

Spatial technology + clear warnings = faster, safer responses.

Recap

14.2 in one screen

Pull it together

Next: 14.3 — The Black Summer fires of 2019–20.

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