Fire (Jan 2024)

Employing Copernicus Land Service and Sentinel-2 Satellite Mission Data to Assess the Spatial Dynamics and Distribution of the Extreme Forest Fires of 2023 in Greece

  • Anna Dosiou,
  • Ioannis Athinelis,
  • Efstratios Katris,
  • Maria Vassalou,
  • Alexandros Kyrkos,
  • Pavlos Krassakis,
  • Issaak Parcharidis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7010020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
p. 20

Abstract

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In 2023, Greece faced its worst wildfire season, with nine major fires causing unprecedented environmental damage of 1470.31 km2. This article uses Copernicus Land Monitoring Service and Sentinel-2 data, employing advanced remote sensing and GIS techniques to analyze spatial dynamics, map burn severity, assess fire extent, and highlight pre-fire tree density and land cover. The study focuses on the catastrophic fire in the Evros region and the damage to the National Forest Park of Dadia–Lefkimmi–Soufli. It also analyzes significant fires in Rhodes, Attica, Thessaly, Evia, Corfu, and Magnesia, emphasizing the compounded challenges posed by terrain, climate, and human factors in those areas. Additionally, the climate data for each affected area were compared with the weather conditions prevailing at the time of the fires. Copernicus Land Cover and Tree Density data are integrated to aid future management, assessment, and restoration. The analysis of maps and fire statistics underscores a notable pattern: areas with higher pre-fire tree density experienced correspondingly higher burn severity. This research underscores the crucial role of such data in assessing wildfire impact. In addition, compared with Copernicus Emergency Management Service, the burned area maps validate the accuracy and reliability of the utilized satellite data. The total burned area was assessed with a high accuracy rate of 96.28%.

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