Bush fire risk in Barwon Darling
This is your opportunity to provide feedback on how the risk of bush fire is managed across our area.
Fire agencies, land managers and other stakeholders have been working to identify ways of reducing the impact of fires on our area – protecting lives, homes, businesses, agriculture, the environment and other assets that are important to Barwon Darling.
The local Bush Fire Management Committee has developed a draft Bush Fire Risk Management Plan, which identifies the risks and the plans to protect them.
The draft plan identifies the risk to communities and the assets we all value. Using feedback from fire agencies, land managers and other stakeholders, the plan identifies ways of reducing the impact of fires across our area.
Your input is important – and by planning together, we will help shape the Bush Fire Risk Management Plan for our area for the next five years.
How the Barwon Darling Bush Fire Risk Management Committee have assessed the risk
Fire is a part of living in Barwon Darling. It has been a part of this landscape for millions of years.
As our population and region changes, the risk of fires impacting on our community has changed.
To understand the bush fire risk in the Barwon Darling, and help inform the best ways of managing and reducing the risk, we’ve looked at what’s important to local communities – including where people live, as well as environmental, economic and cultural assets.
We look at the assets across the landscape, and using computer modelling, we have tested scenarios for possible fire conditions to understand the impact on the community.
Managing the risk in Barwon Darling
We have considered the risk to people and assets across the area to determine the most appropriate and effective way of managing that risk.
There are some measures which apply broadly – such as vegetation management, development controls, bush fire education, and fire suppression activities. These activities reduce the bush fire risk to assets and communities throughout the area.
The Barwon Darling BFMC has closely assessed the risk across the district and has strategically placed treatments addressing areas that have an accumulation of fuels naturally occurring in the landscape while balancing the evolution of risk generated from cropping cycles. This balance has been achieved by ensuring locally aware members and relevant land managers work together to treat risk that is both well placed and well timed.
Where an unacceptable risk exists for a particular area or assets, additional targeted treatment strategies are planned during the next five-year period. These treatment options include:
- Fuel management – the reduction or modification of bush fire fuel with the intent of slowing the spread of bush fire and aiding firefighting operations. This may be identified as;
- Asset protection zones – these are typically close to homes, and provide a separation from the bushland to reduce the impact of fires, and give firefighters a safe place to work if protecting homes in a fire;
- Ignition management zones – areas in the landscape maintained at a reduced fuel level to minimise the propagation of ignitions and limit the rapid escalation of fires;
- Strategic fire advantage zones – these are areas across the broad landscape which, when treated, can help slow the spread of a fire across the landscape;
- Firebreaks – areas designed and managed to provide fuel reduced areas from which a fire can be suppressed.
- Ignition prevention – activities to prevent or reduce bush fire ignitions whether they be accidental or deliberate. This includes community preparedness programs, fuel management and specific actions in the Ignition Prevention Plan.
- Community preparedness – activities such as working with residents to improve their level of planning and preparation for a fire, to increase the survivability of their home and families in the event of a fire.
- Response – specific response requirements for a particular area or value in addition to standard procedures. This may include specific actions in the BFMC Plan of Operations or Fire Access and Fire Trail plan.
North Bourke Airport, Airport Rd
Bourke, NSW 2840
9-11 Young St,
Brewarrina, NSW 2839
PO Box 639
Bourke, NSW 2840
Barwon Darling BFMC is made up of a range of stakeholders from the area including emergency services, land management agencies, local government and local Aboriginal land services and local community groups. This ensures key community stakeholders have a say on bush fire management activities for the benefit of their communities.
The Barwon Darling BFMC is made up of the following representatives:
- NSW Rural Fire Service
- Brewarrina Shire Council
- Bourke Shire Council
- Fire and Rescue NSW
- NSW Police Force
- Essential Energy
- Local Land Services
- National Parks and Wildlife Service
- NSW Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure (Crown Lands)
- Nature Conservation Council of NSW
- NSW Farmers' Association
- Local Aboriginal Land Councils
- Transport for NSW
The Barwon Darling BFMC area spans 6,086,596 hectares (ha). The area covers the Bourke and Brewarrina Local Government Areas (LGAs) and features National Parks covering an area of 393,437ha (6.4% of BFMC area).
The Barwon Darling BFMC area is predominantly semi-arid shrub and woodlands (approx. 80%), with the balance being native grasslands, the built environment or water bodies. A scrub or grass fire can happen at any time of the year, but the risk is higher during the warmer months, when grass and scrub are drier.
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According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics 2021 Census Community Profile there are 2,035 residential dwellings in the Barwon Darling BFMC area with an approximate population of 3,696. -
According to the ABS data on the counts of Australian businesses, there were 312 businesses in the Barwon Darling BFMC. The top three included Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing; Construction; and Rental, Hiring and Real Estate Services accounting for approximately 61.8% of businesses in the Barwon Darling BFMC area. -
The last major bush fires happened in the 2023/24 bush fire season with 27,000ha burnt. -
There are several valuable community assets across the area along with a number of culturally significant sites and environmentally important sites. The Barwon–Darling River and its floodplain are home to some of Australia's most iconic native plants and animals, and provides breeding habitat for waterbirds, including the threatened, blue-billed duck and freckled duck. The Barwon–Darling River catchment is the land of many Aboriginal people, including the Barkindji, Murrawarri, Ngemba and Ngiyampaa. A significant and valuable example of one of the oldest human-made structures on earth is at Brewarrina on the Barwon River, where Aboriginal people built extensive and intricate stone fish traps (Baiame's Ngunnh).






