Lethbridge Herald

More fires flare in B.C., but less woodland burned

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More wildfires are burning in British Columbia in 2018 than in past years but the total amount of timber burned is well below average, a wildfire official says.

“It’s very difficult to directly compare one fire season to another just based on the statistics alone, because the stats only tell part of the full story,” said Ryan Turcot, spokesman for the BC Wildfire Service.

Across the province, 476 wildfires were burning Thursday, including 39 new fires sparked the previous day, while 1,565 have been recorded so far this year, well above the average of 1,130 expected by this point in the season, Turcot said.

“In terms of area burned, we are still sitting at about 75 per cent of what the average would be for this time of year,” Turcot noted.

Wildfires in 2018 have chewed through 1,180 square kilometres of brush and timber, far below the 10-year average of 1,550 square kilometres.

“But that doesn’t tell the whole story because that doesn’t factor in things like the human impact of wildfires, the proximity of some of these wildfires to communitie­s or to people and property,” Turcot said.

Evacuation orders and alerts are in place for residents of communitie­s near wildfires in each of British Columbia’s six fire centres, a significan­t difference from 2017 when huge blazes force thousands from their homes in south-central B.C., but conditions in other parts of the province were less extreme.

The greatest immediate concern for the wildfire service is in the northweste­rn corner of the province where two fires merged overnight into one 300-square kilometre blaze that has already claimed more than two dozen buildings or properties in Telegraph Creek.

Hundreds of residents have been forced from their homes while crews battling those flames brace for a shift in the weather as a heat wave is replaced by a system packing strong, gusty winds and the potential for lightning.

Environmen­t Canada maintained heat warnings for most of southern B.C. through Thursday but cautioned that winds would kick up today.

That prompted regional districts in the central and east Kootenay to issue precaution­ary evacuation alerts for some properties near a number of wildfires that have the potential to cut road access if high winds fan flames.

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