HomeScience & EnvironmentCanada Wildfires: What to Know

Canada Wildfires: What to Know

Wildfires in Canada have cast smoke across a swath of the country and the United States, polluting the air for millions of people, forcing hundreds to evacuate in some places and smudging skies into a brick-red haze.

Canadian firefighters have sought to bring the wildfires under control, but days of dark skies and unhealthy air have raised tensions with the United States. A group of Republican lawmakers criticized Canada’s handling of the fires, and then President Trump threatened to impose tariffs on Canada to pay for harm caused by the smoke.

Prime Minister Mark Carney did not directly address the complaints by Republican lawmakers, but suggested the United States should do more to combat climate change, which scientists say is a significant factor in bigger, longer and fiercer wildfires.

As of Saturday, nearly 200 wildfires were burning in Ontario, including more than 70 raging out of control. Roughly 1.7 million acres have burned in Ontario, according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Center.

Ten communities have been evacuated, and 300 people rescued from campsites, Premier Doug Ford of Ontario said in a brief address on Saturday.

The fires have darkened skies from Toronto to over Detroit and the East Coast of the United States, leaving New York, Toronto and Washington with the worst air quality in the world on Saturday morning.

Mr. Ford said that there were 155 fire crews at work, with 80 water bombers and helicopters flying, and 40 additional aircraft ready to deploy.

He also urged people not to return to campsites or homes, especially because water bombers hold back from dropping fire suppression loads when people are spotted in the bush from overhead. There was little sign on Saturday that the fires would soon wane.

Thunder Bay, Ontario, is quickly becoming overcrowded with people fleeing their homes. Some evacuees have been sent to Toronto and other locations. Indigenous communities have been among the worst affected by the fires.

Officials, including Eleanor Olszewski, Canada’s minister of emergency management, have defended Canada’s forestry practices. “Warmer, drier weather is becoming more common, increasing wildfire risk in Canada and around the world,” Ms. Olszewski said in a statement Friday evening. “Northern Ontario and Quebec, for example, received less than 40 percent of normal precipitation this June, with temperatures above historical averages.”

Most wildfires in Canada spread across such vast, remote areas that they cannot be fought effectively and are often left to burn, experts say.

Half of Canada’s wildfires, like the blazes in northern Ontario, burn in sparsely populated areas, said Michael Flannigan, an expert on fire management at Thompson Rivers University in British Columbia. They are most often accessible only by plane.

Not only is it impossible to quickly deploy firefighters to such remote areas, but there is rarely much time to react. Ignited mostly by lightning, wildfires often spread in a highly combustible boreal forest before firefighters can respond within the first critical 30 minutes.

In the long run, wildfires are considered beneficial because they remove the most flammable material in forests, promoting regeneration. Extinguishing every fire increases risk, as Canadian officials have learned in managing national parks.

The plume of smoke far above the Earth’s surface remained on Saturday, but where and when it would send pollution to the ground was expected to shift considerably by the hour. Amid the elusive forecast, air quality warnings and alerts remained in place across many of the affected states and provinces.

Summer weather, like thunderstorms, can help clear smoke, but the smoke itself complicates the forecast. It can block sunlight, keeping temperatures lower at the surface and preventing storms from rising and intensifying.

Scientists estimate that wildfire smoke is linked to tens of thousands of deaths a year, and that human-caused climate change is responsible for a growing share of them.

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