Led by co-directors, Dr. Mathieu Bourbonnais (UBC Okanagan) and Dr. Lori Daniels (UBC Vancouver), the Centre will support innovative approaches and novel discoveries co-created in collaboration with other research experts, Indigenous Knowledge Keepers, government agencies, private land owners and forest, fire and land management professionals.
Given our new climate reality, holistic and transformative changes to fire and forest management are urgently needed to achieve ecosystem and community resilience, and learn to coexist with wildfire.
The Centre aims to realize meaningful outcomes in the following areas:
Create healthy and resilient forests through local- to landscape-level proactive management to help forests and communities adapt to a changing climate
Prioritize proactive management and ecocultural restoration, including forest thinning, prescribed fire, and Indigenous cultural burning to increase forest and community resilience to megafires
Build a robust community outreach and education program to share knowledge and ensure communities in fire-prone environments are prepared for wildfire
Advance research co-led by Indigenous Knowledge Holders and Western scientists to share leading-edge advances with the global community
FAST FACT: Landscape-level planning is the development of science-based land management plans for extensive areas within a region. The CWC will contribute to transformative changes across landscapes to increase forest heterogeneity and restore disrupted ecosystems by integrating Indigenous Knowledge with western science to improve resiliency to climate change.
The cost for wildfires in BC
Year | Total Fires | Total Hectares Burned |
Total Cost (millions) |
State of Emergency (number of days) |
---|---|---|---|---|
2023* | 2,251 | 2,840,571 | >$1billion | 38 |
2021 | 1,642 | 869,279 | $719 | 56 |
2018 | 2,117 | 1,354,284 | $615 | 23 |
2017 | 1,353 | 1,216,053 | $649 | 70 |
*as of November 20, 2023
“The wildfires I see now aren’t the same wildfires I saw 10 to 15 years ago. They’re a different beast.” – Dr. Mathieu Bourbonnais, The Future of Wildfire
Dr. Mathieu Bourbonnais
Assistant Professor
Dr. Bourbonnais is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Earth, Environmental and Geographic Sciences at UBC Okanagan. He is the Principal’s Research Chair in Wildland Fire Risk and Fire Management, the Co-director of the UBC Centre for Wildfire Coexistence, and the Principal Investigator of the Earth Observation & Spatial Ecology Lab. Dr. Bourbonnais’ research spans the realms of technology and ecology. He develops new tools and sensors to monitor and predict fire risk, fire severity impacts on biodiversity, and to support prescribed fire planning, operations and monitoring. Dr. Bourbonnais is also a leader at UBCO in curriculum development. He is the Geospatial Program Chair and since joining UBCO in 2018, has developed and launched a Minor in Geospatial Sciences and the Fundamentals of Wildland Fire Ecology and Management Micro-credential Program. His research is informed by over a decade of experience in wildland fire management as a Wildland Firefighter with the Alberta Wildfire Rappel Program and Parks Canada.
Wildfire affects the health and wellbeing of both human and wildlife populations.
When fires approach communities, they force evacuations and can lead to property loss or, more devastatingly, the loss of life. For example, two people lost their lives in a 2021 catastrophic wildfire that destroyed 90% of the Village of Lytton, BC.
Areas scorched by flames also displace wildlife, pushing some species closer to extinction. When inhaled, the fine particulate matter present in smoke can have negative health effects on individuals, particularly those with respiratory or cardiovascular disease.
A 2021 study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that up to 50 per cent of air pollution particulate matter 2.5 microns or smaller found in some western regions of the United States is caused by wildfire — levels that have been ramping up over the past decade.
However, some fire is essential for the maintenance of healthy forests.
While the megafires seen within the past decade are unprecedented in their scale and intensity, fire still plays an important role in forest health and renewal. It removes dry, woody debris from the forest floor that can fuel more intense blazes. It also clears the way for renewed plant growth, supporting forest rejuvenation and overall health.
Reconstructions from tree rings reveal that low-severity fires once maintained diverse, resilient forests across much of BC’s interior region. These fires were ignited by both lightning and Indigenous fire stewardship.
“Many of our tree species are adapted to diverse weather- and climate-related disturbances, such as fire, wind and insect outbreaks. But historical and evolutionary boundaries are being pushed.”
– Dr. Lori Daniels
Dr. Lori Daniels
Professor
Dr. Daniels is an internationally recognized expert in forest ecology and the impacts of humans and climate change on wildfires. Dr. Daniels is familiar with British Columbia’s diverse ecosystems and has a proven track record of Indigenous and community partnerships. As the co-director of the Centre for Wildfire Coexistence, Dr. Daniels will be positioned as a go-to expert in wildfire.
Awarded the 2023 Association of Fire Ecology Distinguished Leader in Research Award and 2020 Killam Teaching Prize in Forestry, she is a proven public educator, having given over 250 presentations, workshops and field tours to forest professionals and community and school groups. Since 2015, she has conducted close to 300 media interviews as a specialist. In 2022, Dr. Daniels was a panelist on the “Expert Roundtable on Wildfire and Forest Resilience” held in conjunction with the UN General Assembly (UNGA77) release of their report on climate tipping points.

The future of wildfire
UBC Okanagan research is helping communities build solutions for a new reality
Featured News
Centre for Wildfire Coexistence launched thanks to $5M donation from the Koerner family
UBC Forestry launches Centre for Wildfire Coexistence, exploring proactive wildfire management solutions with cutting-edge wildfire research.
Fighting Fire with Food
Project led by Gitanyow Nation in collaboration with UBC researchers explores how cultural burning and planting practices protect against catastrophic wildfire.
Questions? Want to learn more?
For information on how to support the Centre for Wildfire Coexistence, managed by UBC Okanagan’s Irving K. Barber Faculty of Science and UBC Vancouver’s Faculty of Forestry, contact:
Sarah Sandholm – Associate Director, Development and Alumni Engagement, UBC Okanagan | sarah.sandholm@ubc.ca
Emma Tully – Assistant Dean, Development, Alumni and External Relations, Faculty of Forestry | emma.tully@ubc.ca