"way better than "Purposely" torching the forest trees with a "prescribed" burn, which is a huge waste of energy potential, as well as a potential threat to people, like we saw just recently. Such a huge failure of human intellect."
That's not what a prescribed burn does (torching trees). Properly done, it only burns the detritus on the ground; nobody prescribes a forest fire, those happen when conditions get away from the forest managers (sudden high winds, etc.) More often, fires occur due to lightning strikes and idiots/campers/sportsmen lighting and forgetting to douse campfires. Potential threat to humans? You mean the idiots who lobby congress to allow leasing forest land to build their vacation homes, without any regard to making said homes fire resistant/fire safe? Who expect the forest service and others to drop everything and rescue them and their belongings from their remote estate 20 miles up a rough forest road when the eventual fires eventually draw near? Sorry, no sympathy here.
We have state managed forests here, and they have worked to try and find a way for understory/detritus management to be economically feasible. A contractor was allowed to use crews to remove fallen timber, and thinned trees, from a local managed forest near me. The contractor was paid a small fee for the "service" with the intent that the wood would be shipped to local mills that could burn the waste timber for power generation and to heat the lumber mill kilns. It didn't pay well enough, apparently, and the enterprise folded without clearing more than a few acres. The shipping costs weren't the major issue, it is the manpower required to clamber through a lowland thicket of half-grown fir and hemlock, to set the yarder cables to drag out trees. Then clamber back in when the tree/cable gets hung up, repeat ad infinitum.