What is the National Fire Danger Rating System?
The National Fire Danger Rating System (NFDRS) is a system that allows land agencies to estimate today’s or tomorrow’s fire danger for a given area. It integrates the effects of existing and expected states of selected fire danger factors into one or more qualitative or numeric indices that reflect an area’s fire protection needs. It links an organization’s readiness level (or pre-planned fire suppression actions) to the potential fire problems of the day.
You can learn more about these ratings by reading:Gaining an Understanding of the National Fire Danger Rating System.
The symbols and adjectives shown below are to alert the public of fire danger levels, using adjectives and colors based on criteria established by the National Fire Danger Rating System (NFDRS).
- IGNITION: A rating of the probability that a firebrand will cause an actionable fire.
- SPREAD: A rating of the forward rate of spread of the head of a fire.
- SPOTTING: Behavior of a fire producing sparks or embers that are carried by the wind and which start new fires beyond the zone of direct ignition by the main fire.
- CONTROL: The completion of control line around a fire, any spot fires therefrom, and any interior islands to be saved; burned out any unburned area adjacent to the fire side of the control lines; and cool down all hot spots that are immediate threats to the control line, until the lines can reasonably be expected to hold under the foreseeable conditions.