The Guardian (USA)

Canada risks more ‘catastroph­ic’ wildfires with hot weather forecast

- Reuters

Canada risks another “catastroph­ic” wildfire season, the federal government has warned, forecastin­g higher-thannormal spring and summer temperatur­es across much of the country, boosted by El Niño weather conditions.

Last year, Canada endured its worstever fire season, with more than 6,600 blazes burning 15m hectares (37m acres), an area roughly seven times the annual average. Eight firefighte­rs died and 230,000 people were evacuated from their homes.

This winter the country experience­d warmer-than-normal temperatur­es and widespread drought, setting the stage for another punishing summer.

“The temperatur­e trends are very concerning. With the heat and dryness across the country, we can expect that the wildfire season will start sooner and end later and potentiall­y be more explosive,” Harjit Sajjan, the minister for emergency preparedne­ss, said at a press conference.

Federal ministers warned climate change was contributi­ng to more extreme weather events, including wildfires, drought and heatwaves.

“Wildfires have always occurred across Canada. What’s new is their frequency and their intensity,” said Jonathan Wilkinson, the minister for energy and natural resources. “The science is clear. The root cause of this is climate change.“

Ottawa is providing C$256m (US $187.15m) over five years, a sum matched by the country’s provinces and territorie­s, to fund new equipment, and has also committed to training an extra 1,000 community-based wildfire firefighte­rs.

Last year, Canada deployed 5,500 internatio­nal firefighte­rs from countries including South Africa and Spain and 2,135 armed forces members to help tackle the blazes.

Severe weather, including wildfires, caused more than C$3.1bn in insured damages in 2023, according to a government analysis.

The government of British Columbia warned in a separate update that the westernmos­t province’s snowpack – an accumulati­on of snow that melts seasonally – is averaging its lowest level since 1970, measuring 63% of normal versus 88% of normal at the same time last year.

“Typically drought and wildfire go hand in hand,” said Jonathan Boyd, a hydrologis­t at the province’s River Forecast Centre. “It’s not setting up to be a great season but it still depends on what the weather conditions are [this spring].”

 ?? ?? A wildfire burns south of Fort McMurray, Alberta, near Highway 63 on 7 May 2016. Photograph: Jonathan Hayward/AP
A wildfire burns south of Fort McMurray, Alberta, near Highway 63 on 7 May 2016. Photograph: Jonathan Hayward/AP

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