Ottawa Citizen

Smoke from U.S. fires reaches Europe

`DEVASTATIN­G'

- DEBORAH BLOOM AND BRAD BROOKS

PORTLAND • As fire crews continued to battle deadly wildfires sweeping the western United States, thousands of evacuees in Oregon and other states faced a daily struggle while scientists in Europe tracked the smoke on Wednesday as it spread on an interconti­nental scale.

With state resources stretched to their limit, President Donald Trump on Tuesday night approved a request from Oregon’s governor for a federal disaster declaratio­n, bolstering federal assistance for emergency response and relief efforts.

Dozens of fires have burned some 1.8 million hectares of tinder-dry brush, grass and woodlands in Oregon, California and Washington state since August, ravaging several small towns, destroying thousands of homes and killing at least 34 people.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has obligated more than $1.2 million in mission assignment­s to bring relief to Oregon and has deployed five urban search and rescue teams to the wildfire-torn region, the agency said in a statement on Wednesday.

Search teams scoured incinerate­d homes for the missing as firefighte­rs kept up their exhausting battle.

The wildfires, which officials and scientists have described as unpreceden­ted in scope and ferocity, have filled the region’s skies with smoke and soot, compoundin­g a public health crisis already posed by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Scientists in Europe tracked the smoke as it bore down on the continent, underscori­ng the magnitude of the disaster. The European Union’s Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) is monitoring the scale and intensity of the fires and the transport of the resultant smoke across the U.S. and beyond.

“The fact that these fires are emitting so much pollution into the atmosphere that we can still see thick smoke over 8,000 kilometres away reflects just how devastatin­g they have been in their magnitude and duration,” CAMS Senior Scientist Mark Parrington said in a statement.

Eight deaths have been confirmed during the past week in Oregon, which became the latest and most concentrat­ed hot spot in a larger summer outbreak of fires across the entire western U.S. The Pacific Northwest was hardest hit.

The fires roared to life in California in mid-August, and erupted across Oregon and Washington around Labour Day last week, many of them sparked by catastroph­ic lightning storms and stoked by record-breaking heat waves and bouts of howling winds.

Weather conditions improved early this week, enabling firefighte­rs to begin to make headway in efforts to contain and tamp down the blazes.

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said 16,600 firefighte­rs were still battling 25 major fires on Tuesday, after containing other large blazes.

Reuters

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