The deadly wildfires in Maui reveal a vulnerability in the United States that is increasing as quickly as threats from climate change: Huge swaths of the nation lie in dry danger zones where wildfires spark, and cash-strapped governments have ineffective emergency plans to save lives.

That was the deadly combination in the Maui disaster – namely, wildfire risk coupled with what some experts and victims have called questionable emergency preparedness. And it has played out in some of the deadliest fires in the nation and around the globe, alarming fire experts and community leaders.

Similar scenarios happened in Paradise, California, where 85 people died and nearly 19,000 structures were destroyed in the Camp Fire in 2018; and in Algeria, Italy and Greece, where questions of effective emergency response and preparedness have been raised after more than 40 people combined died from wildfires sparked by an intense heat wave, high winds and dry vegetation last month. Canada is experiencing a devastating record wildfire season, with over 33.9 million acres scorched and at least four people dead so far.

In Maui, where at least 111 people have died and more than 2,200 acres were burned in the Aug. 8 wildfires, the county already knew it had a high wildfire risk, according to a study it commissioned two years ago following an “unprecedented wildfire season” in 2019, where more than 20,000 acres were burned.

“Hawaii’s and Maui’s fire problem is more extreme than on the U.S. mainland,” the study said, noting dozens of buildings and vehicles were damaged in a 2018 wildfire. While there were no deaths in either of those years, warnings were raised – and possibly not heeded by local officials.

Now, experts from around the world are taking a second look at many places that may also be at risk after Maui’s crisis, which now is among the top ten deadliest wildfires on record in the U.S. since 1871.

“The next Maui could be anywhere,” said Tirtha Banerjee, a civil and environmental engineering professor at the University of California, Irvine. “Realistically, almost any place could have a wildfire.”

America isn’t the only country worried about wildfires

Thousands of communities, from urban enclaves, coastal towns and remote locales throughout the U.S., and abroad, similar to Maui, are vulnerable to wildfires because of the increasingly deadly combination of climate change and governments’ lack of emergency plans and resources, experts say.