3.9 Article

Fire Risk in Traditional Villages of Sumba, Indonesia

Journal

HERITAGE
Volume 5, Issue 4, Pages 3605-3615

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/heritage5040187

Keywords

firefighting access; fire frequency; climate change; consecutive dry days; vernacular architecture; MODIS hotspots

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Fire poses a global problem for traditional villages, particularly those using wood and thatch as materials. Traditional villages on Sumba Island have limited ability to suppress fires due to their remote location and poor accessibility. By analyzing documentary evidence and satellite imagery, the fires on Sumba Island since 2001 have been traced. It has been discovered that the number of dry-season fires correlates with the consecutive dry days, indicating a potential increase in future fires. Efforts are being made to reduce the impact of village fires, but challenges exist due to the significance of architectural heritage and religious context.
Fire is a global problem for traditional villages, especially those dominated by the use of wood and thatch. These places are often crowded, which leads to the rapid spread of fire. The traditional villages on the island of Sumba are architecturally striking, with their tall houses interspersed with ancestral tombs. They are set on an island of grassland landscapes managed using fire. There is little local ability to suppress village fires as they are remote from firefighting services and access to the dwellings is poor. Documentary evidence along with satellite imagery of hotspots have been used to trace the fires on Sumba since 2001. Little meteorological data are accessible for Sumba, so we have used global homogenized records, reassessments and projections of climate to examine long-term change in Sumba. There is a dry season in July-September, which corresponds with the period of most frequent fires. The number of dry-season fires correlates with the number of consecutive dry days, which has been used to establish a likely increase in the potential for fires in the future. There is increased effort to reduce the impact of village fires. Approaches could include reducing the flammability of traditional materials, detection systems and enhanced support of village firefighting capabilities. These may be difficult to introduce given the importance of the architectural heritage and the religious context of village layout, design and governance.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.9
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available