Bangkok Post

Cool weather aids battle against fire

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LAC LA BICHE: Canadian firefighte­rs looked to cooler weather yesterday to help with their battle against the country’s most destructiv­e wildfire in recent memory, as officials sought to gauge the damage to oil sands boomtown Fort McMurray.

The fire, which started on May 1, spread so quickly that the community’s 88,000 inhabitant­s barely had time to leave and whole neighbourh­oods were destroyed.

“This is great firefighti­ng weather. We can really get in here and get a handle on this fire and really get a death grip on it,” Alberta fire official Chad Morrison said on Sunday.

The wildfire scorching through Canada’s oil sands region in northeast Alberta had been expected to double in size on Sunday, but light rains and cooler temperatur­es helped hold it back.

The temperatur­e, which reached a high of 17C on Sunday, was expected to cool further, with Environmen­t Canada forecastin­g a 40% chance of showers in Fort McMurray yesterday.

Cooler temperatur­es around 10C were expected until Friday. Still, much of Alberta is tinder-box dry after a mild winter and warm spring.

Alberta’s government estimated on Sunday that the devastatin­g wildfire had consumed 161,000 hectares. Officials made clear it was too early to put a time line on getting thousands of evacuees camped out in nearby towns back to Fort McMurray soon, even if their homes are intact.

The city’s gas has been turned off, its power grid is damaged and the water is undrinkabl­e.

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley said on Sunday recovery efforts had begun, with 250 employees from power company Atco working to restore the power grid and assess gas infrastruc­ture.

Fort McMurray is the centre of Canada’s oil sands region. About half of the crude output from the sands (a million barrels per day) has been taken offline, according to estimates.

Oil prices jumped almost 2% in trading early yesterday, as Canada’s fire contribute­d to tightening supply.

The inferno may become the costliest natural disaster in Canada’s history. One analyst estimated insurance losses could exceed C$9 billion (about 244 billion baht).

Nearly all of Fort McMurray’s residents escaped the fire safely, although two people were killed in a car crash during the evacuation.

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