Toronto Star

Ontario seeing fewer forest fires this year

- TYLER GRIFFIN

Ontario is seeing far fewer forest fires this year than the 10year average, and only a fraction of what it experience­d last summer, when fires tore through a record amount of land in the province, according to the provincial government.

There have been 179 fires so far this year, with 2,416 hectares of land burned, Evan Lizotte, a fire informatio­n officer with the Ministry of Natural Resources, said in a recent interview.

That’s compared with the 10year average of 669 fires and 174,196 hectares of land burned by this time in the season, he said.

It’s also in stark contrast to last year, which saw more than 1,000 forest fires burn more than 782,119 hectares by the same time last year — the most land burned on record in Ontario. Thousands of people were evacuated from First Nation communitie­s affected by northern wildfires last year.

Forest fires are driven by weather, Lizotte said. So far this season, Ontario has seen a cyclical pattern of warm weather followed by periods of significan­t and widespread precipitat­ion, which has largely kept fires in check, he said.

Last year, drought conditions made the ground three or four times more receptive to lightning strikes that could spark fires; meanwhile, this year some regions had snow into May, he said. Even though the forest fire season started at the beginning of April, there were no fires recorded in the province until April 28, he added.

“While we’ve had a lot of lightning hitting the ground this summer, we don’t have drought conditions in the deeper soils that would promote those potential fires to emerge to the surface,” Lizotte said.

It’s not uncommon to see slower forest fire seasons occasional­ly, he said, noting that was also the case in 2014, 2008 and 2004. In 2014, there were 303 fires that burned 5,386 hectares of woodland in the province. In 2008, 342 fires burned 1,316 hectares, and 2004 saw 432 fires burn 1,617 hectares of land.

There have nonetheles­s been significan­t forest fires this season, including one in Timmins, Ont. that accounted for most of the province’s burned woodland for this year, Lizotte said. That fire has been out since early June, he said.

The slower season has allowed Ontario’s fire rangers to help out in other regions, he said. Last month, 60 provincial fire rangers were sent to Manitoba to assist with fires in that province, and an additional team of 40 was sent to join them later, he said.

Lizotte said specialist­s were also sent to the Yukon and Alberta to help with large fires there. All have since returned to Ontario.

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